This paper examines the closure of public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia from 1959-1964 in an effort to avoid desegregation. Specifically, the paper traces the roots of the political actions which led to the closure and then-Governor Harry Byrd's role in Virginia's political machine at the time. The paper argues that it was Byrd's influence which led to the conditions that not only made the closure possible in Virginia, but encouraged the white citizens of Prince Edward County to make their stand. In September, 1959, the public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia closed their doors to all students. While most white students were educated in makeshift private schools, the doors of public education remained clo...
The 1954 rulings in the United States Supreme Court cases of Brown v Board of Education was a landma...
This book is an edited version of the diary of David J. Mays, a prominent Richmond, Virginia attorne...
In writing this paper I have examined the initial reaction of Virginia\u27s leaders to the U.S. Supr...
The doors of public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia, were closed at the end of the spring ...
When the Supreme Court ordered integration of public schools in 1954 following Brown vs. Board of Ed...
This dissertation explores the high water mark of southern resistance to the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s...
This Issue: The Era of Closed Schools: Prince Edward County, Virginia by John R. Barden, Head, Refer...
This dissertation explores the critical role played by the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot newspaper\u27s ed...
In the twentieth-century struggle for racial equality, there was perhaps no setting more fraught and...
Professor Tobias chronicles the social, political, and legal dimensions of Virginia\u27s slow path t...
Virginia\u27s Pupil Placement Board was the most enduring vestige of the state\u27s massive resista...
Beginning in 1959 the public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia, were closed for 5 years in o...
Segregation itself was not dead in Virginia, but it took on a more subtle approach. Governor Almond ...
The efforts to equalize the legally segregated schools in Virginia began in the mid 1930\u27s. It wa...
The desegregation of the public schools in Virginia began on February 2, 1959, and continued through...
The 1954 rulings in the United States Supreme Court cases of Brown v Board of Education was a landma...
This book is an edited version of the diary of David J. Mays, a prominent Richmond, Virginia attorne...
In writing this paper I have examined the initial reaction of Virginia\u27s leaders to the U.S. Supr...
The doors of public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia, were closed at the end of the spring ...
When the Supreme Court ordered integration of public schools in 1954 following Brown vs. Board of Ed...
This dissertation explores the high water mark of southern resistance to the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s...
This Issue: The Era of Closed Schools: Prince Edward County, Virginia by John R. Barden, Head, Refer...
This dissertation explores the critical role played by the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot newspaper\u27s ed...
In the twentieth-century struggle for racial equality, there was perhaps no setting more fraught and...
Professor Tobias chronicles the social, political, and legal dimensions of Virginia\u27s slow path t...
Virginia\u27s Pupil Placement Board was the most enduring vestige of the state\u27s massive resista...
Beginning in 1959 the public schools in Prince Edward County, Virginia, were closed for 5 years in o...
Segregation itself was not dead in Virginia, but it took on a more subtle approach. Governor Almond ...
The efforts to equalize the legally segregated schools in Virginia began in the mid 1930\u27s. It wa...
The desegregation of the public schools in Virginia began on February 2, 1959, and continued through...
The 1954 rulings in the United States Supreme Court cases of Brown v Board of Education was a landma...
This book is an edited version of the diary of David J. Mays, a prominent Richmond, Virginia attorne...
In writing this paper I have examined the initial reaction of Virginia\u27s leaders to the U.S. Supr...