Brown v. Topeka Board of Education
Oral History Collection
Kansas State Historical Society
2 SCOPE AND CONTENTS
This collection provides a look at the background surrounding the landmark
Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka from those
who, in one way or another, were involved with the cases before they
reached the Supreme Court, or who were involved in or affected by the
ruling in some way (i.e., victims, plaintiff, and beneficiaries). Those
interviewed included: former students, community leaders and activists,
attorneys, judges, and others affected by the outcome of the case.
This collection also contains information on the following topics:
segregation, discrimination, the Topeka school system, history of Topeka’s
African American community, Atchison Topeka Santa Fe Railroad, U.S.
military, and World War II.
3 HISTORY
3.1 Brown et. al. v. Board of Education of Topeka,
et. al.
3.2 Belton v. Gebhart Bulah v. Gebhart
3.3 Bolling, et. al v. C. Melvin Sharpe, et. al.
3.4 Briggs v. Elliott
3.5 Davis, et. al., v. Prince Edward County Board of
Supervisors
3.1 Brown et. al. v. Board of
Education of Topeka, et. al.
In Kansas there were eleven school integration cases, dating from 1881
to 1949, prior to Brown in 1954. In many instances the schools for African
American children were substandard facilities with out-of-date textbooks
and often no basic school supplies. What was not in question was the
dedication and qualifications of the African American teachers and principals
assigned to these schools.
In response to numerous unsuccessful attempts to ensure equal opportunities
for all children, African American community leaders and organizations
stepped up efforts to change the dual education system. In the fall
of 1950 members of the Topeka, Kansas, Chapter of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) agreed to again challenge
the “separate but equal” doctrine governing public education.
The strategy was conceived by the chapter president, McKinley Burnett;
the secretary Lucinda Todd; and attorneys Charles Scott, John Scott,
and Charles Bledsoe. For a period of two years, Mr. Burnett had attempted
to move Topeka public school officials to simply choose to integrate
schools because the Kansas law did not require segregated public schools.
The law permitted segregated schools only at the elementary level in
first class cities (cities with populations of 15,000 or more). Filing
suit against the District was a final attempt to secure integrated public
schools.
Their plan involved enlisting the support of fellow NAACP members
and personal friends as plaintiffs in what would be a class action suit
filed against the Board of Education of Topeka Public Schools. A group
of thirteen parents agreed to participate on behalf of their twenty
children.
Each plaintiff was instructed to watch the paper for enrollment dates
and take their child or children to the school for whites only nearest
to their home. Once they attempted enrollment and faced denial, they
were to report back to the NAACP. This would provide the attorneys with
the documentation needed to file a lawsuit against the Topeka School
Board. The African American schools appeared equal in facilities and
teacher salaries, but some programs were not offered and some textbooks
were not available. In addition, there were only four elementary schools
for African American children as compared to eighteen for white children.
This made attending neighborhood schools impossible for African American
children. Junior and Senior high schools were integrated.
Oliver Brown was assigned as lead plaintiff, principally because he
was the only man among the plaintiffs. On February 28, 1951, the NAACP
filed their case as Oliver L. Brown, et .al., v. The Board of Education
of Topeka (KS). The District Court ruled in favor of the school board
and the case was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. At the Supreme
Court level, their case was combined with other NAACP cases from Delaware,
South Carolina, Virginia, and Washington, D.C. The combined cases became
known as Oliver L. Brown, et. al., v. The Board of Education of Topeka,
et. al.
On May 17, 1954, at 12:52 p.m., the U.S. Supreme Court issued a unanimous
decision that it was unconstitutional, violating the 14th Amendment,
to separate children in public schools for no other reason than their
race. Brown v. The Board of Education helped change America forever.
In 1979 a group of young attorneys were concerned about a policy in
Topeka Public Schools, which allowed open enrollment. Their fear was
that this would lead to desegregation. They believed that with this
type of choice, white parents would shift their children to other schools
creating predominately African American or predominately white schools.
As a result, these attorneys petitioned the federal court to reopen
the original Brown case to determine if Topeka Public Schools had in
fact ever complied with the court’s ruling of 1954.
This 1979 case is commonly known as Brown III. These young attorneys
were Richard Jones, Joseph Johnson, and Charles Scott, Jr. (son of one
of the attorneys in the original case), in association with Chris Hansen
from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in New York. In the late
1980's Topeka Public Schools were found to be out of compliance. On
October 28, 1992, after several appeals, the U.S. Supreme Court denied
Topeka Public Schools’ petition to once again hear an appeal in
the Brown case. In June of 1993 the U.S. Supreme Court again declined
to review the case, and it was remanded back to the U.S. District Court
in Topeka. A court-ordered desegregation plan to remove any remaining
vestiges of school segregation was issued on July 25, 1994.
As a result, the school district was directed to develop plans for
compliance and have since built three magnet schools. These schools
are excellent facilities and make every effort to be racially balanced.
Ironically, one of the new schools is named for the Scott family attorneys
for their role in the Brown case and civil rights. It is the Scott Computer
and Mathematics Magnet School. United status was at last granted to
Topeka Unified School District # 501 on July 27, 1999.
3.2 Belton v. Gebhart Bulah
v. Gebhart
The final challenge to segregated schools in Delaware came by way of
two separate cases with identical issues. One case developed in the
suburb of Claymont and another in the rural community of Hockessin.
Segregated Howard High School was a continual source of frustration
for African American parents in suburban Claymont. Although their community
had a well-maintained school in a picturesque setting with spacious
facilities, African American children could not, by law, attend the
Claymont school. Instead they were transported daily on a twenty mile
round trip to Howard High School located in an undesirable section of
Wilmington. Not only was the distance an adverse factor, class size,
teacher qualifications in terms of advanced degrees, and the incomplete
curriculum also angered African American parents. Students interested
in vocational training courses had to walk several blocks to the run-down
Carver annex, regardless of the weather.
In March of 1951, eight African American parents sought legal counsel
from attorney Louis Redding. At his urging these parents asked state
education officials to admit their children to the local Claymont School;
they were denied. Consequently, Redding agreed to take their case.
In the rural community of Hockessin, Mrs. Sarah Bulah only wanted equal
opportunity for their adopted daughter, Shirley Barbara. While a bus
carrying white children passed her home daily, she had to drive Shirley
two miles to an old one-room schoolhouse designated for African American
children. Sarah Bulah decided to share her concern with state officials,
so she wrote to the Department of Public Instruction and to the Governor.
Their replies reaffirmed that no bus transportation would be provided
because “colored” children could not ride on a bus serving
white children. Undaunted Mrs. Bulah made an appointment with attorney
Louise Redding.
In both cases, attorney Redding was ready to challenge the notion
of not permitting integrated schools. Both Sarah Bulah and the parents
from Claymont, including Ethel Belton, were prepared to sue in order
to change state law. Their case would name the State Board of Education
as the principal defendant. The Board members were specifically charged.
The first name among the members was Francis B. Gebhart. The resulting
cases were called Belton v. Gebhart and Bulah v. Gebhart.
Judge Collin Seitz, in this case ruled that the “separate but
equal” doctrine had been violated and that the plaintiffs were
entitled to immediate admission to the white school in their communities.
Although a victory for the named plaintiffs, his decision had dealt
the sweeping blow to segregation they had hoped for. The decision did
not apply broadly throughout Delaware.
The Belton and Bulah cases would ultimately join four other NAACP
cases in the Supreme Court ruling in Brown.
3.3 Bolling, et. al v. C. Melvin Sharpe,
et. al.
Since its inception, Washington, D.C. has been home to a significant
population of African Americans. Yet as the nations capital, the District
of Columbia did not set a positive example regarding race relations,
it merely followed custom. Washington, D.C., was firmly rooted in racial
segregation.
After World War II, the country moved to integrate the military, Washington,
D.C., seemed uninterested in challenging racial custom. By 1951 the
traditional African American community leadership (i.e., churches, sororities,
lodges) had failed to organize any protest against the run-down facilities
that served as schools for their children. Even most parents with “good”
wages from government jobs remained silent in the matter of substandard
segregated schools. That same year, the owner of a local African American
barbershop stepped forward and filled the leadership void in the matter
of better schools for their children. His name was Gardner Bishop, a
man who simply knew civil rights from social wrong.
It has been reported that on September 11, 1950, Bishop led a group
of eleven African American children to the city's new high school for
white students. The school, named for John Phillip Sousa, was a large
modern building, boasting of multiple basketball courts and spacious
classrooms. At that moment Gardner Bishop asked for admittance for the
African American students that had accompanied him to see Sousa High
School. It seemed clear that the building could accommodate a higher
enrollment. His request was denied, ensuring the African American students
a continued unequal educational experience.
Bishop had been organizing parents to take action regarding the poor
school their children were assigned to, after his trip to Sousa High,
it was time for action. He approached attorney Charles Hamilton Houston
on their behalf. The idea was to request a facility, equal to that of
Sousa High, be constructed for their children. Houston worked on the
case independently; it was not an NAACP case.
In 1950, while preparing the Bolling case, Charles Houston was stricken
with a heart attack. As a result, he asked a colleague and friend, James
Nabritt, Jr., to help Gardner Bishop and his group. At that point, the
idea of equalization of facilities was rejected by Nabritt and replaced
by a challenge to segregation per se.
In 1951, in U.S. District Court, the case of Bolling v. Sharpe was
filed. This was named for Spottswood Thomas Bolling, one of the children
who accompanied Gardner Bishop to Sousa High. He was among those denied
admission based solely on race.
Although unsuccessful, Nabritt trusted his concept of an all out attack
on segregation. The Bolling case would later meet with success as one
of the cases combined under Brown v. Board of Education.
3.4 Briggs v. Elliott
The legal action in Summerton, South Carolina, began in 1947. Ironically
the push to take action derived from a fortuitous encounter between
Rev. James Hinton, president of the South Carolina NAACP, and Rev. J.
A. DeLaine, a local school teacher. The NAACP leader, through a speech
attended by DeLaine, issued a challenge to find the courage to test
the legality of the discriminatory practices aimed at African American
school children.
Rev. J. A. DeLaine was teaching in St. Paul Rural Primary School and
also serving several small churches as an A. M. E. Minister. (Initially
schools for African Americans in Clarendon County began in their churches
and gradually moved to separate buildings. Therefore, many schools and
churches had the same names such as Liberty Hill A. M. E. and Liberty
Hill Elementary). For these children and their parents the issue was
bus transportation to school. Rev. DeLaine approached Clarendon County
school officials but failed to secure school buses. African American
children did not have buses; they had to walk, sometimes as far as eight
miles each way to school.
School officials justified their refusal by claiming that since the
African American community did not pay (collectively) much in taxes,
it would be unfair to expect white citizens to provide transportation
for African American school children. Even a letter writing campaign
launched by Rev. DeLaine yielded no assistance from state educational
officials. Because of the urgent need, African American parents collected
donations within their community and purchased a second-hand school
bus. The continual repairs on the bus proved to be too costly for the
parents.
Again frustration prompted Rev. DeLaine to seek relief from the District
Superintendent L. B. Accord. It was hoped that since Accord was a fellow
minister, he would be sympathetic. However, he refused to even consider
Rev. DeLaine’s request. Remembering the words of Rev. Hinton,
the NAACP state president, DeLaine knew it was time to take legal action.
On March 16, 1948, local attorney Harold Boulware, together with Thurgood
Marshall, filed in the U.S. District Court the case of Levi Pearson
v. County Board of Education. Their case was dismissed on the technical
matter of where Mr. Pearson paid his taxes. His land straddled more
than one school district. The court ruled that Pearson had no legal
standing because he paid taxes in District 5 and his children attended
school in Districts 22 and 26.
This did not stop Rev. DeLaine and by 1949 he had obtained enough
signatures to file a second case. The national office of the NAACP agreed
to sponsor their case. It would give Clarendon’s African Americans
not just buses, but would seek educational equality. In May of 1950,
with the help of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the case of Briggs v.
Elliott was filed. Two months later, the plaintiffs’ attorneys
moved from simply pursuing equalization of facilities and obtaining
buses to attacking segregation.
The court ruled against the petitioners and ordered schools to be
equalized, focusing on equalization and ignoring the broader question
of the constitutionality of segregation. The state’s action resulted
in an NAACP appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Briggs case became
part of the Brown litigation.
The Briggs case evoked an extreme reaction. All of the petitioners
suffered swift and severe hardships for their courage. Harry Briggs
was fired from his job. Annie Gibson lost her job as a motel maid, and
her husband lost land that had been in his family for eight decades.
Rev. DeLaine saw his home burned to the ground. Federal Judge Walter
Waring, who sided with the petitioner’s concerns, was forced to
leave the state by a joint resolution of the South Carolina House of
Representatives.
3.5 Davis, et. al., v. Prince
Edward County Board of Supervisors
In the Commonwealth of Virginia, the only way an African American could
receive a high school diploma in the early twentieth century was by
attending a private academy. Catholics, Methodists, Episcopalians, and
Presbyterians in Virginia operated private high schools. The public
schools for blacks were elementary schools (grades 1-8) operated by
county school boards. The fact that school boards were county affiliated
rather than city or town affiliated might have something to do with
the relatively rural population of most school districts.
The history of activism in Richmond dates back to the streetcar boycotts
in the 1900s. When the privately owned streetcar lines attempted to
segregate the cars, blacks boycotted them for two years. This impasse
was resolved when the Commonwealth of Virginia passed laws making segregation
of public facilities legal. Streetcar companies had to comply with the
new law. African Americans were not prepared to fight the state legislature
at this point in time.
In Prince Edward County, public schooling for blacks was considered
"progressive" compared to neighboring counties. Due partly
to the fund-raising efforts of the Farmville Colored Women’s
Club, the Robert Morton School added grades 9-12 by 1947. Prior to
1947, African
Americans "graduated" from high school after the 11th grade.
Given that the number of school years was fewer than in the white
schools,
African Americans from neighboring counties came to Farmville to attend
Robert Morton High School in the 1930s and 1940s. The original building
was a two-story frame building that later became the elementary school
once the "new" Robert Morton High School was built in 1943 across
the
street. The "new" school was never adequately large enough, necessitating
the use of Tarpaper-covered buildings hastily constructed on the campus
for use as classrooms. It was the use of these temporary buildings
as classroom space that sparked a student strike in 1951.
The student leaders responsible for the strike were from families
who were all long-term residence of the surrounding area. One student
leader, Barbara Jones, had a family distinguished by activism. Barbara
was the niece of Vernon Johns, the legendary minister who served in
the Dexter Street Baptist Church the ten years prior to Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. Vernon Johns was an outspoken critic of segregation and involved
in numerous protest attempts throughout this career. Even though he
was in Montgomery, Alabama, at the time of the student strike, community
members reported that he was influential in giving advice to the striking
students. His wife was a former teacher in the Robert Morton High School,
and he still had numerous family ties in the community of Farmville
and the surrounding area.
The Johns family knew the social politics of the area. Farmville is
an hour and a half southwest of Richmond, on the same route Robert E.
Lee followed during his retreat from Richmond in the spring of 1865.
Farmville is just two miles from where the Confederacy made its last
stand at the battle of Sailor’s Creek. Even in 1950, life in the
rural south still carried certain risks for African American adults
whose livelihoods were inextricably linked to a group of whites who
controlled commerce in the area. Opinion was divided within the African
American community over whether segregated conditions in Farmville should
be challenged.
The Reverend Francis Griffin considered the situation unacceptable
and used every opportunity to address the need for change. As president
of the local NAACP and chair of the Morton High School PTA, he was well
positioned to push for change. Together with school principal M. Boyd
Jones, they petitioned the school board to address the obvious disparity
in the schools by asking for a new building to replace Morton High.
After several months of inactivity by school officials, the stage was
set for the Morton students, frustrated with their circumstances, to
take action.
On April 23, 1951, a student strike, organized largely by Barbara Jones,
was underway. School principal Jones was called away by a false claim
of racial problems at the bus station downtown. With him absent, the
students assembled under pretense of a school sanctioned gathering,
and Barbara Spoke of the plan to strike. The strike amounted to students
walking out of school with instructions, from strike leadership, not
to leave the school grounds. Some of the students were given signs to
carry that expressed their goal of better facilities. With the strike
underway, Barbara Jones and classmate Carrie Stokes sought legal counsel
from the NAACP in Richmond. The students received a response in the
form of a commitment by NAACP attorney Oliver Hill agreeing to meet
with them. The strike lasted ten days. Hill promised that action would
be taken on their behalf, with that, the students returned to school
on May 7, 1951.
After a month of legal maneuvering, Oliver Hill’s colleague,
Spottswood Robinson, citing the student’s complaint, filed a suit
in Federal Court. Surprisingly when the case was filed, it did not carry
the name of Barbara Jones as its lead plaintiff. It was by happenstance
that the first student listed was a ninth grade girl, the daughter of
a local farmer. Her name was Dorothy Davis. The Virginia case was filed
as Dorothy E. Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward County.
After filing this case, Spottswood Robinson immediately traveled to
South Carolina where the case of Briggs v. Elliot was about to be heard
in another Federal Court.
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