Brown, Not White: School Integration and the Chicano Movement in Houston

2002 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 220
Author(s):  
Jose M. Alamillo ◽  
Guadalupe San Miguel
2002 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 310
Author(s):  
Gilbert G. Gonzalez ◽  
Guadalupe San Miguel

2003 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 228
Author(s):  
Anthony Quiroz ◽  
Guadalupe San Miguel

2001 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 329-366 ◽  
Author(s):  
James McGrath Morris

As it had for countless other children in Arlington, Virginia, the idyll days of summer had come to end for eleven-year-old Edward Leslie Hamm Jr. on the morning of 5 September 1957. After donning a pair of clean khaki pants and a freshly pressed, short-sleeved white shirt, Hamm was heading back to the classroom along with twenty-one thousand other students in this Northern Virginia community. That alone was enough to put a pit in any child's stomach. But for Hamm the day possessed an added dimension. Instead of riding a bus for forty-five minutes to the Negro school six miles across the county, his parents were dispatching him, along with two other black pupils, to challenge the continued exclusion of blacks from the all-white school, one mile from their isolated exclusively black neighborhood. A full three years after Brown v. Board of Education, not a single black student had yet attended a white public school in Virginia, seen by many observers as the frontline state of resistance to school integration. The three children were nervous and took no comfort in thinking of themselves among a vanguard of the civil rights movement. “I wasn't into an integration thing,” recalled George Tyrone Nelson, who was fourteen at the time and among the trio challenging the segregated schools that day.


1974 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 370-371
Author(s):  
E. PHILIP TRAPP
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document