USDC, Western District of Virginia, Lynchburg Division, Civil Action Case #534-Jackson et al vs. School Board of Lynchburg
Creator | USDC, Western District of Virginia, Lynchburg Division |
Description | In September 1961, the parents of Cecelia Jackson, Linda Woodruff, Owen Cardwell, and Brenda Hughes filed suit against the School Board of Lynchburg and the Pupil Placement Board of the Commonwealth of Virginia in U.S. District Court. The plaintiffs petitioned the court to have their children admitted to the all-white E.C. Glass High School in Lynchburg, alleging that the school board of Lynchburg was not complying with the Brown vs. Board of Education Supreme Court rulings that called for school desegregation. In November 1961, Judge Thomas Michie ordered the school board of Lynchburg to admit Linda Woodruff and Owen Cardwell to E.C. Glass High School but denied admission to Cecelia Jackson and Brenda Hughes, claiming that their grades and low-scores in their aptitude tests made them academically unfit for admission to E.C. Glass High School. Judge Michie also ordered the school board to submit a plan for desegregating the Lynchburg school system. The school board submitted a plan in February 1962 calling for the desegregation of the Lynchburg school system at one grade per year. The Judge approved the plan. The plaintiffs appealed the judge’s ruling with regards to Cecelia Jackson and Brenda Hughes and the desegregation plan submitted by the school board of Lynchburg to the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. In September 1962, the Court of Appeals reversed the Michie’s ruling denying admission of Jackson and Hughes to the E.C. Glass School and the desegregation plan of the Lynchburg School Board. Jackson and Hughes were ordered to be admitted to the E.C. Glass High School and the School Board of Lynchburg was ordered to submit a new plan for desegregation. For the next nine years the case would continue to be adjudicated with regards to handling the question as to how and when the Lynchburg School system would be desegregated. It would not be until 1971 that a final plan would be put into effect that created a racially balanced school district in the City of Lynchburg. |
Call number | Civil Action Case #534 |
Date from | 1961 |
Date to | 1971 |
Geographic school | Lynchburg, VA |
Size | unknown |
Access restrictions yes/no | no |
Access restrictions | |
Part Of larger collection yes/no | |
Larger collection title | |
URL | |
Repository | NARA Mid-Atlantic Region |
Repository address | 14700 Townsend Road, Philadelphia, PA 19154-1096 |
Repository contact name | David Weber |
Repository contact title | Director, Records Management Program |
Repository contact email | philadelphia.reference@nara.gov |
Repository contact phone | (215) 305-2000 |
DoveRegion | (outside of Virginia) |
Subject
Types |
o African American students
o African Americans–Civil rights o African Americans–Segregation o High school students o Public schools o School integration o Segregation in education o Topeka (Kan.). Board of Education–Trials, litigation, etc. o o Virginia. Pupil Placement Board o District courts–Virginia o United States. Court of Appeals (4th Circuit) o Public schools–Virginia–Lynchburg o Virginia. Supreme Court of Appeals o Legal Dccuments |