Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pages from the Past: 1959

- — Celia Storey

The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette is printing one page a day from each of the 200 years since the first issue of the Arkansas Gazette was printed Nov. 20, 1819. We chose these pages for reasons that range from historic significan­ce to how legible we can make the antique ink. What was printed in these old pages reflects our history but not necessaril­y our values.

This Page 1 of the Arkansas Gazette appeared May 25, 1959, on the morning of a momentous School Board election in Little Rock.

With all four of the city’s public high schools closed for the school year by Gov. Orval Faubus to prevent their desegregat­ion, three members of the city’s six-member School Board had taken it upon themselves May 5 to fire 44 district employees — teachers and administra­tors who supported the NAACP.

The other three members — Everett Tucker, Russell Matson and Ted Lamb — opposed the dismissals, aka “the purge.” They had walked out May 5 so there would be no quorum.

As Ben F. Johnson recounts in his recently updated Arkansas in Modern America Since 1930, members of the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People were banned from state employment under Act 115 of 1958. Act 115 was one of a group of laws the state Legislatur­e passed in reaction against the integratio­n of Little Rock Central High School by nine black students during the 1957-58 school year. One law empowered Faubus to close any school that was under a desegregat­ion order; another, Act 10, required public school teachers to take a loyalty oath and swear out an affidavit listing all the organizati­ons they supported.

The board had met May 5 to review its compliance with Act 115.

A recall election was quickly demanded by two opposed sets of outraged citizens:

The Committee to Restore Our Segregated Schools (CROSS), the Mothers League of Central High School, the Capital Citizens Council and the States Rights Council campaigned to dump the three board members who walked out.

In the other corner was the Women’s Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools (which had grown from an initial 58 members to 1,400), the Parent-Teacher Associatio­n and Stop This Outrageous Purge (STOP), a hastily assembled committee of 179 businessme­n and lawyers.

The Gazette’s front page editorial explained that voters faced a choice between recalling the three segregatio­nist board members — Ben Rowland, R.W. “Bob” Laster and Ed I. McKinley — who fired the teachers, or recalling the other three, who wanted the district to desegregat­e without further delay, as the U.S. Supreme Court had ruled that it must.

Voters also had the option of removing all six members, a choice seen as favoring segregatio­n.

Turnout was heavy, and as the Gazette reported May 26, delivered a narrow but decisive victory for STOP. With about 25,000 votes cast, the three STOP-backed School Board members were retained by margins ranging from 50.8% to 52.4%. The three pro-segregatio­n members were removed by percentage­s ranging from 52.9% to 55.5%.

In June, the Pulaski County Board of Education appointed three new board members to replace those recalled. With the addition of state Rep. J.H. Cottrell Jr. and businessme­n Henry Lee Hubbard and B. Frank Mackey, Tucker, Matson and Lamb rehired 39 of the 44 employees fired May 5.

A three-judge U.S. District Court declared the state’s 1958 school-closing law unconstitu­tional, and the Little Rock School Board announced that it would not appeal the decision. It would reopen its high schools in the fall. The district’s “Lost Year” was over.

To read a timeline of events from the twoyear aftermath of the integratio­n of Little Rock Central High School, see arkansason­line. com/200/bonus.

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