User:Coastside/New York City school boycott
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The New York City school boycott, known as Freedom Day, was a mass boycott and demonstration on February 3, 1964 to protest segregation in the New York City public school system. Students and teachers stayed out of public schools to highlight the deplorable conditions, and demonstrators held rallies demanding integration.[1] It was the largest civil rights demonstration of the 1960s and involved almost half a million participants.[2]
Historical context
[edit]Freedom Day was part of a larger effort by New York activists to target the Board of Education through acts of civil disobedience for their failure to implement a reasonable integration plan.[1] The demonstration followed the smaller Chicago Public School Boycott, also known as Freedom Day, which took place in October 1963.
Although school segregation was illegal in New York City since 1920, housing patterns and continuing segregation meant schools remained racially segregated and unequal. At the time of the boycott, schools that enrolled mostly black and Latino students tended to have inferior facilities, less experienced teachers and severe overcrowding, with some schools operating on split shifts of as little as four hours a day of class time for some students.[3]
Opponents of integration, including a coalition of predominantly white neighborhood groups called Parents and Taxpayers, emphasized the importance of children attending schools closest to their homes and expressed concerns over busing.[3][4]
Just prior to the boycott, the Board of Education released a plan for integrating the schools over three years, including limited rezoning, improving educational quality in schools serving black and Latino students and reducing overcrowding. Pro-integration activists argued the plan was not comprehensive enough.[3]
A few days before the planned event, the New York Times printed an editorial titled “A Boycott Solves Nothing” condemning the activist leaders and claiming it would be violent, illegal, unreasonable and unjustified.[2]
Freedom Day
[edit]The boycott was led by Reverand Milton Galamison, who had previously formed the NAACP Parents’ Workshop for Equality, an organization which promoted an aggressive strategy to desegregate schools.[5] To organize the event, Glamison recruited Bayard Rustin, a prominent activist who directed the successful March on Washington six months earlier.[6]
On Monday, February 3, 1964, about 45 percent of all New York City students at the time stayed out of school in the boycott. An estimated 464,361 students and teachers participated overall making the event the largest U.S. civil rights demonstration of the 1960s, nearly twice as big as the March on Washington.[2] An estimated 90,000 to 100,000 boycotting students attended alternative classes in makeshift Freedom Schools in which community educators taught lessons in religious institutions, recreational spaces, and private homes.[6] Of the city's 43,865 teachers, 3,357 were absent on the day, triple the usual number, despite threats from School Superintendent Bernard Donovan.[1] Demonstrators also rallied at the Board of Education, City Hall and the office of Governor Rockefeller.[7]
New York's newspapers expressed astonishment at the number of predominantly black and Puerto Rican students who participated and by the complete absence of violence or disorder from the demonstrators.[6]
Aftermath
[edit]Ostensibly, the boycott failed in its objective of forcing immediate reform in the New York City schools[7]. Another boycott planned for the following month failed due to lack popular support.[5] Nevertheless, the event could be considered an important step in a much larger movement toward reform.[1]
Despite being a significant event in the history of the civil rights movement, the New York City school boycott does not appear prominently in U.S. history textbooks, because it goes against the common narrative that important historical events aimed to combat racism in the United States occurred predominantly in the South.[4][2]
The 1964 Civil Rights Act, enacted five months after the New York City school boycott, included a loophole that allowed school segregation to continue in major Northern, cities including New York City, Boston, Chicago and Detroit.[4] As of 2018, New York City continues to have the most segregated schools in the country.[8]
See also
[edit]- Freedom Day, other events known as Freedom Day
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Barnett, Ethan Scott (29 November 2017). "The New York Times And The Movement For Integrated Education In New York City". The Metropole. The Urban History Association. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- ^ a b c d
Sanchez, Adam (Winter 2019–20). "The Largest Civil Rights Protest You've Never Heard Of". Rethinking Schools. Vol. 34, no. 2. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
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: CS1 maint: date format (link) - ^ a b c Khan, Yasmeen (3 February 2016). "Demand for School Integration Leads to Massive 1964 Boycott — In New York City". New York Public Radio (WNYC). SchoolBook. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ a b c Delmont, Mathew (3 February 2016). ""Jim Crow must go": Thousands of New York City students staged a one-day boycott to protest segregation -- and it barely made the history books". salon.com. Salon.com, LLC. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
- ^ a b Zenz, Cassandra (11 September 2010). "MILTON A. GALAMISON (1923-1988)". Black Past. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- ^ a b c Perlstein, Daniel (2004). "The dead end of despair: Bayard Rustin, the 1968 New York school crisis and the struggle for racial justice" (PDF). The Official Website of the City of New York. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- ^ a b "New York School Boycott". Civil Rights Digital Library. Retrieved 15 January 2020.
- ^ Toure, Madina (14 June 2018). "NYC Has the Most Segregated Schools in the Country. How Do We Fix That?". Observer. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
Category:1964 protests Category:February 1964 events Category:Civil rights protests in the United States Category:Education in New York City Category:History of New York City Category:History of civil rights in the United States Category:Protest marches