Desegregating Texas Schools

About The Book

This study of school integration struggles in 1950s Texas demonstrates how power politics denied black students their constitutional rights. In the famous Brown v. the Board of Education decisions of 1954 and 1955 the United States Supreme Court ruled that separate but equal schools for black and white students were unconstitutional. Yet it took more than a decade of struggle before black students gained full access to previously white schools. Mansfield Texas a small community southeast of Fort Worth was the scene of an early school integration attempt. In this book Robyn Duff Ladino draws on interviews with surviving participants media reports and archival research to provide the first full account of the Mansfield school integration crisis of 1956. Ladino explores how politics at the local state and federal levels ultimately prevented the integration of Mansfield High School in 1956. Her research sheds new light on the actions of Governor Allan Shiverswho in the eyes of the segregationists validated their cause through his actionsand it underscores President Eisenhowers public passivity toward civil rights during his first term of office. Despite the short-term failure however the Mansfield school integration crisis helped pave the way for the successful integration of Central High School in Little Rock Arkansas in 1957. Thus it deserves a permanent place in the history of the civil rights movement.
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