Article contents
A History of Discrimination Against Black Students in Chicago Secondary Schools
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
In recent years scholars representing various academic disciplines have carried on government sponsored research to determine the impact of integration on black and white students. These scholars have produced such nationally influential and widely adopted studies as the first “Coleman Report.” Nevertheless, the research has made little reference to the history of integration and has therefore called into question whether such practices are best for every school system. Moreover, the studies have had broad foci, rarely concentrating on specific school grades or areas of student growth and development. Using the secondary schools of Chicago, both high schools and junior high schools, this essay will examine the historical integration-segregation dilemma from the passage of the first Illinois school law in 1825 to the solidification of the segregation era in the 1930s. It will also provide information on the structural impediments to black students' academic advancement as well as identify the forces which sought to establish a vocational caste system to limit the employment opportunities for these students.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 1980 by History of Education Society
References
Notes
1 “Equality of Educational Opportunity” (U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, Office of Education, 1966), p. 20. This report is referred to as the “Coleman Report.” Google Scholar
2 Mason, Mame Charlotte, “The Policy of the Segregation of the Negro in the Public Schools of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois” (Masters thesis, University of Chicago, 1917), p. 27; Session of Laws of Illinois (1825), p. 121.Google Scholar
3 Illinois Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration, comp., “The Negro in Illinois,” a file of interviews, reports and newspaper articles (Carter G. Woodson Branch, Chicago Public Library).Google Scholar
4 Seventh Census of the United States (1850), p. 705; Smith, George W., History of Illinois, Vol. III (American Historical Society, Chicago, 1927), p. 145.Google Scholar
5 Act of February 6, 1835, Laws of Illinois (1834–35), pp. 161–63.Google Scholar
6 Pierce, Bessie Louise, A History of Chicago, Vol. II, 1848–71 (New York 1940), p. 390.Google Scholar
7 Johnston, Shepherd, “Historical Sketches of the Public School System of the City of Chicago,” Board of Education Annual Report (1880), pp. 50–51.Google Scholar
8 Seventh Census of the United States (1850), p. 705; Eighth Census of the United States (1860), p. 341.Google Scholar
9 Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1891–92,) pp. 59, 70.Google Scholar
10 Chicago Evening Journal (11 July 1863), p. 4; Chicago Tribune, (28 July 1861), p. 1.Google Scholar
11 Chicago Tribune, (24 March 1863), p. 4 Google Scholar
12 Illinois did have a compulsory school law until 1889. Illinois Public Laws (1889), pp. 237–38.Google Scholar
13 Chicago Tribune, 1 April 1864, p. 1; Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1864–65), p. 37.Google Scholar
14 Drake, St. Clair and Cayton, Horace, Black Metropolis (New York, 1945), p. 44; Chicago Tribune, (6 October 1864), p. 4. See also Johnston, Shepherd, “Historical Sketches of the Public School System of the City of Chicago,” Annual Report of the Board of Education (1879), p. 38. The actions of black parents not only affected the evening schools, but the elementary schools as well.Google Scholar
15 Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1891–92), p. 390.Google Scholar
16 Chicago Tribune, (3 February 1874), p. 1; Chicago Evening Journal, (24 March 1844), p. 2.Google Scholar
17 Municipal Code of Chicago, Constitutional Provisions, Statutes and Ordinances (1881).Google Scholar
18 Chicago Commission on Race Relations, The Negro in Chicago: A Study of Race Relations and a Race Riot (Chicago, 1922), p. 235.Google Scholar
19 Daily Democrat, (18 November 1840), p. 1; Daily Democratic Press, (2 February 1854), p. 1.Google Scholar
20 Spear, Allan H., Black Chicago: The Making of a Negro Ghetto: 1890–1920 (Chicago, 1967), p. 7.Google Scholar
21 Pierce, , History of Chicago, p. 12.Google Scholar
22 Spear, , Black Chicago, p. 7.Google Scholar
23 Ibid. Google Scholar
24 Report of the U.S. Department of Labor (1916–1917), p. 67.Google Scholar
25 U.S. Bureau of Immigration, Annual Report of the Commissioner General of Immigration (1922), p. 108.Google Scholar
26 Jones, Thomas Jesse (ed.), Negro Education: A Study of the Private and High Schools for Colored People in the United States (Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education, Vol. I, No. 38, 1916), pp. 33–34.Google Scholar
27 Ibid., p. 42.Google Scholar
28 Wilson, Charles H., Education for Negroes in Mississippi Since 1910 (Boston, 1947), pp. 42–43.Google Scholar
29 Bond, Horace Mann, Negro Education in Alabama (New York, 1939), p. 257.Google Scholar
30 Long, Hollis Moody, Public Secondary Education for Negroes in North Carolina (New York, 1932), p. 3.Google Scholar
31 Davis, William R., The Development and Present Status of Negro Education in East Texas (New York, 1934), p. 31.Google Scholar
32 Jones, , Negro Education, p. 42; See also Scott, Emmett J., Negro Migration During the War (Preliminary Economic Studies of the War, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, No. 16, 1920), p. 18.Google Scholar
33 Chicago Commission on Race Relations, The Negro in Chicago, p. 82.Google Scholar
34 Myrdal, Gunnar, An American Dilemma (New York, 1944), p. 195.Google Scholar
35 Spear, , Black Chicago. Spear derived his figures from several sources: U.S. Census Reports, 1850–1930; US. Twelfth Census, 1900; and US. Thirteenth Census, 1910. See also Cressey, Paul, “The Succession of Cultural Groups in the City of Chicago” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago, 1930) and Burgess, Ernest W. and Newcomb, Charles, eds., Census Data of Chicago, 1920 (Chicago, 1931).Google Scholar
36 Homel, Michael, “Negroes in the Chicago Public Schools, 1910–1914” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago, 1972), p. 109.Google Scholar
37 Interview with Harding, Clarence W. who attended Wendell Phillips High 1910–1913 (14 May 1977). The number of total students at Wendell Phillips is derived from Annual Report of the Board of Education—The City of Chicago (1913), p. 438.Google Scholar
38 Interview, Harding, Clarence W. (14 May 1977), for dates of incorporation see Bell, John W., “The Development of the Public High School in Chicago” (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago, 1939).Google Scholar
39 Thompson, Charles H., “A Study of the Reading Accomplishments of Colored and White Children” (Masters thesis, University of Chicago, 1920), pp. 57–58.Google Scholar
40 Ibid., p. 58.Google Scholar
41 Chicago Commission on Race Relations, The Negro in Chicago, p. 241.Google Scholar
42 The Crisis, Vol. 14, No. 2 (June 1917):91.Google Scholar
43 Chicago Daily News (20 December 1916), p. 11.Google Scholar
44 Chicago Commission on Race Relations, pp. 245–246.Google Scholar
45 City of Chicago, Historic City: The Settlement of Chicago (Chicago, 1977), pp. 93–94.Google Scholar
46 Interview with Reverend Rucker, John W., who attended Englewood High School until 1922 (1 March 1979). For district boundaries see the Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1921–22), pp. 67–70.Google Scholar
47 Interview with Reverend Rucker, John W. (1 March 1979). City of Chicago, Historic City: The Settlement of Chicago, pp. 93–94.Google Scholar
48 Chicago Defender (21 March 1914), p. 1.Google Scholar
49 Chicago Defender (12 November 1910), p. 1.Google Scholar
50 Chicago Defender (1 April 1917), p. 2.Google Scholar
51 Chicago Defender (24 February 1912), p. 1 and (22 June 1912), p. 1.Google Scholar
52 Chicago Real Estate Board Bulletin (25 April 1917), pp. 315–17.Google Scholar
53 Illinois Writers Project of the Works Progress Administration, comp., “the Negro in Illinois.” Google Scholar
54 The Chicago Commission on Race Relations, p. 605.Google Scholar
55 Abbott, Edith, The Tenements of Chicago: 1908–1935 (Chicago, 1936), p. 125.Google Scholar
56 Breckinridge, Sophonisba, “The Color Line in the Housing Problem,” Survey, 40 (February 1913): 575–76.Google Scholar
57 Chicago Defender (3 February 1912), p. 1.Google Scholar
58 Franklin Frazier, E., The Negro in the United States (New York, 1949), pp. 444–446.Google Scholar
59 The Chicago Commission on Race Relations, p. 605.Google Scholar
60 Drake, and Cayton, , Black Metropolis, p. 56.Google Scholar
61 The Chicago Commission on Race Relations, p. 343.Google Scholar
62 Drake, and Cayton, , Black Metropolis, p. 56.Google Scholar
63 Vice Commission of Chicago, The Social Evil of Chicago: A Study of Existing Conditions with Recommendations (Chicago, 1912), p. 38.Google Scholar
64 Ibid., p. 34.Google Scholar
65 Chicago Whip (25 November 1920), p. 1; (2 December 1920), p. 1.Google Scholar
66 Sandburg, Carl, The Chicago Race Riots (New York, 1919), pp. 69–70.Google Scholar
67 Chicago Defender (9 September 1918), p. 1.Google Scholar
68 Woofter, Thomas J., Negro Problems in Cities (New York, 1928), p. 175. See also Chicago Commission on Race Relations, The Negro in Chicago, p. 333.Google Scholar
69 Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1915–16), p. 94.Google Scholar
70 Chicago Commission on Race Relations, p. 254.Google Scholar
71 Ibid. Google Scholar
72 Ibid., p. 252.Google Scholar
73 Chicago Defender (6 October 1917), p. 6; (20 November 1920), p. 7.Google Scholar
74 Chicago Defender (6 October 1917), p. 6; (20 November 1920), p. 7.Google Scholar
75 Keener, E. E., Mental Ability of High School Freshmen in Relation to Problems of Adjustment (Chicago, 1924), pp. 12–13, 18.Google Scholar
76 Thorndike, E. L., “Intelligence Scores of Colored Pupils in High Schools,” School and Society, 18, No. 463 (1923):570.Google Scholar
77 Bond, Horace Mann, “Intelligence Tests and Propaganda,” Crisis (June 23, 1924):62.Google Scholar
78 Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1940–41), pp. 69–70; Chicago Defender (8 March 1941), p. 1.Google Scholar
79 Chicago Commission on Race Relations, p. 254.Google Scholar
80 Ibid. Google Scholar
81 Ibid., p. 271; Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1921–22), pp. 74–76.Google Scholar
82 Annual Report of the Chicago Board of Education (1925–26), pp. 102–103.Google Scholar
83 Lorenz, Julia H., “The Reading Achievements and Deficiencies of Ninth Grade Negro Pupils” (Masters thesis, University of Chicago, 1937), pp. 12–15.Google Scholar
- 5
- Cited by