Browse Exhibits (1 total)

The Impact of Swann

In September 1964, Darius and Vera Swann petitioned the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education for their son James to attend an integrated school. The Swann family recently moved to Charlotte from India where the family worked as missionaries. In India, James did not experience a segregated education, but in Charlotte, the six year old attended the all-black Biddleville School. The Swann family wanted their child to attend the closest school to their home, not an inconvenient school that continued a policy of segregation. At that time, only two percent of black children attended a desegregated school in Mecklenburg County. The school board denied their appeal, and as a result, the Swann family filed a suit against the board. Local civil rights lawyer Julius Chambers and his team represented the case and accused the school board of violating the law by failing to comply with the Constitution on equal grounds. As time elapsed, the lawsuit became a national issue and the Supreme Court ultimately ruled in favor of busing as a legitimate method in order to desegregate public schools....

 

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