The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia Tech honors 'Pioneer' black students

Sculptures of first who enrolled in 1960s will be dedicated.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com

In September of 1961, nine months after protests and violence greeted the first two black students to integrate the University of Georgia, Ralph A. Long Jr., Lawrence Williams and Ford C. Greene quietly, and uneventful­ly, enrolled at Georgia Tech.

A year later, Ronald Yancey followed and in 1965 would become the first black student to graduate from Georgia Tech.

“The school and the community of Atlanta embarked on this challenge to integrate, and the students were determined that they were not going to embarrass Tech,” Long said Tuesday.

On Wednesday, Georgia Tech will honor the four students with the dedication of two bronze sculptures on campus.

“The Three Pioneers” sculpture — honoring Long, Williams and Greene — will be placed in Harrison Square, named in honor of Edwin D. Harrison, Georgia Tech’s president at the time of their arrival.

“The First Graduate” sculpture — recognizin­g Yancey — will be installed in the heart of campus near the G. Wayne Clough Undergradu­ate Learning Commons.

“When we thought about Georgia Tech’s progressio­n of becoming a more diverse institutio­n, and as we look to build upon our past, we wanted to honor them in a way that showed their courage and what they meant to the Institute,” said Archie Ervin, vice president of diversity at the school. “They changed the course of this great university.”

Before the students arrived, Georgia Tech, like many large Southern universiti­es, was mostly white.

But in May of 1961, President Harrison said integratio­n was necessary “to forestall the pos

sibility of federal interventi­on and to maintain administra­tive control over the school’s admissions.” He had watched what was happening at the UGA, where Charlayne Hunter-Gault and Hamilton Holmes were harassed by hostile crowds of students and locals.

“Tech made it very well known that they would not have any problems with their student body, and everyone pretty much respected that,” Long said.

Not that there wasn’t discrimina­tion at Tech.

Long said that when the three students arrived on campus for orientatio­n, they were escorted by a state patrolman. Williams said he got into a fight after his first math class because he was intentiona­lly tripped. There were isolated threats. Because they were all from Atlanta, they found it easier to live at home, rather than risk staying on campus.

But, for the most part, there was little resistance, making the college the first major school in the Deep South to integrate peacefully and on its own accord.

“They carried themselves with great dignity. They were well-dressed. They were well-mannered. They were well-spoken. And they did an excellent job in lowering the expectatio­ns of problems people expected from them,” said Yancey, in a 2011 interview marking the 50th anniversar­y.

Still, flagship schools in Mississipp­i and Alabama didn’t follow Tech’s lead in subsequent years and saw violent confrontat­ions.

“There was some thought given to making the Tech experience different and a desire to make this something that was not violent and not reactionar­y,” Ervin said. “Georgia Tech integrated because it was the right thing to do.”

Today, Tech ranks as one of the most diverse big colleges in the nation. In 2018, the last year the numbers were verified, 45.2% of Tech’s students were white and 36% were Asian.

But only 5.8% of the students were black. That percentage ranks last among Georgia’s five largest public universiti­es.

Long and Greene arrived at Tech from Henry McNeal Turner High School in Atlanta, the same school that UGA’s Hunter-Gault and Holmes had attended.

Williams and Yancey, who arrived on campus a year later from Morehouse, had attended Washington High School.

“I was going to Northweste­rn on a tennis scholarshi­p,” Long said, adding that he also considered Morehouse, Clark College and MIT. “But we were chosen to go to Tech.”

None of the students ever lived on campus.

“We just went to our classes and went home. But other than a few catcalls, we didn’t have any problems,” Long said. “The only real problem was being ignored.”

None of the three initial students who integrated Tech graduated from there. Williams was drafted into the Air Force. The other two transferre­d to historical­ly black schools — Greene, to Morgan State University; Long, to Clark, where he won the conference championsh­ip in tennis.

The trio, along with Yancey, will attend the 3 p.m. dedication ceremony at Harrison Square, behind Tech Tower, at 225 North Ave.

“This is a tremendous and resounding honor when you think about it,” Long said. “I have talked to people who are amazed that Tech would do this. But, at the same time, I realize that we contribute­d to what that institutio­n is today.”

 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF GEORGIA TECH ?? The original clay models show “The Three Pioneers” of Georgia Tech (Ralph A. Long Jr., Lawrence Williams and Ford C. Greene) standing and “The First Graduate” (Ronald Yancey) sitting.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF GEORGIA TECH The original clay models show “The Three Pioneers” of Georgia Tech (Ralph A. Long Jr., Lawrence Williams and Ford C. Greene) standing and “The First Graduate” (Ronald Yancey) sitting.
 ??  ?? “The Three Pioneers”: Ralph A. Long Jr. (from left), Lawrence Williams and Ford C. Greene were the first black students to enroll at Georgia Tech in 1961.
“The Three Pioneers”: Ralph A. Long Jr. (from left), Lawrence Williams and Ford C. Greene were the first black students to enroll at Georgia Tech in 1961.

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