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Police-supported Texas demonstrations against Federal school desegregation order
The
Mansfield school desegregation incident
is a 1956 event in the
Civil Rights Movement
in
Mansfield, Texas
, a suburb of the
Dallas?Fort Worth metroplex
.
In 1955, the
Mansfield Independent School District
was segregated and still sent its Black children to separate, run down facilities, despite the
Brown v. Board of Education
court decision in 1954. Three students brought a suit with the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
. In
Jackson v. Rawdon
, the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the students. In 1956, Mansfield ISD became the first school district in the state ordered by a federal court to desegregate. The school board approved the measure and allowed
Mansfield High School
to desegregate. Although other districts in Texas desegregated quietly that fall, the mayor and police chief of Mansfield did not approve of this measure. When school started on August 30, 1956, they joined over 300 whites in front of Mansfield High School. Their goal was to prevent the enrollment of the three Black students. The town turned into complete turmoil as three Black effigies were hanged as part of the demonstration.
[1]
Texas Governor
Allan Shivers
was a noted segregationist and used the power of his office to resist implementation of
Brown v. Board of Education.
Shivers dispatched
Texas Rangers
to prevent integration, led by Captain Jay Banks, who, in addition to threatening to arrest Black students, refused to take down an effigy of a Black man hanging by a noose at the entrance of Mansfield High School.
[2]
Shivers then authorized the
Mansfield Independent School District
to send its Black students to
Fort Worth, Texas
. By doing this the school district had effectively ignored a federal court order for integration.
[1]
After the transfer of the Black students to Fort Worth, the demonstrations soon ended. This led to Arkansas Governor
Orval Faubus
to attempt a similar ordeal in
Little Rock, Arkansas
in 1957. Later that year, Texas passed more segregation laws that delayed integration even further.
Facing the lack of federal funds, the
Mansfield Independent School District
quietly desegregated in 1965.
[1]
The decade long defiance of a federal school integration order was one of the longest in the nation during that period.
[3]
In June 2020, a statue modeled after
Texas Ranger
Captain Jay Banks, called
One Riot, One Ranger
, was removed from Dallas Love Field.
[4]
It was first dedicated in 1961, 5 years after the Mansfield School Desegregation Incident.
[4]
References
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Events
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1954?1959
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1964?1968
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