Three School Suits Filled in N.C.
Press Release
February 11, 1959
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Press Releases, Loose Pages. Three School Suits Filled in N.C., 1959. feb23487-bc92-ee11-be37-00224827e97b. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/1382e405-4f35-4852-ba93-302d8159a0c4/three-school-suits-filled-in-nc. Accessed December 04, 2025.
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~PRESS RELEASE® @
NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATIONAL FUND
1O COLUMBUS CIRCLE + NEW YORK 19,N.Y. © JUdson 6-8397
DR. ALLAN KNIGHT CHALMERS oa THURGOOD MARSHALL
President Director-Counsel
THREE SCHOOL SUITS FILED IN N. C.
February 11, 195¢
GREENSBORO, N.C. -- Legal steps were taken this week in three
separate actions to compel North Carolina school officials to operate
the public school system of that State on an integrated basis.
In 2 complaints filed on Tuesday, February 10, 1959, with the
U. S. District Court in Greensboro, N, C,, attorneys for the NAACP
Legal Defense and Educational Fund sought permanent injunctions
restraining the Greensboro Board of Education from assigning Negro
students to racially segregated schools,
The third suit was also filed on Tuesday with the U, S, District
Court in Charlotte. It sought a similar injunction to restrain the
Mecklenberg County Board of Education from refusing to admit Negro
students to schools nearest to their homes.
Named as defendants in the 3 cases are the North Carolina Advis-
ory Committee on Education and the North Carolina State Board of
Education, They are accused of having counselled with and working in
concert with all the school boards in the State “for the purpose of
preventing desegregation of the schools of North Carolina, or for. keep-
ing such desegregation to a minimum,"
The North Carolina Advisory Committee on Education was created
in 1955 by the General Assembly to frustrate desegregation efforts.
Attorneys for the Negro students asked that both the State Board
of Education and the Advisory Committee be permanently enjoined and
restrained from counselling and working with any school board for the
purpose of preventing desegrepation of schools,
One of the 2 actions filed in Greensboro and the one filed in
Charlotte attacked the policy of requiring Negro students to register
in schools nearest their residences for Negroes only, regardless of
how far the distance might be, One student lives 11 miles from the
all-Negro school he must attend,
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The other complaint charged the Greensboro School authorities
with assigning Negro students to a 6-room dilapidated building on
the campus of a school attended by white students only, The build-
ing is administratively attached to an all-Negro school and is with-
out playground facilities, auditorium, cafeteria, gymnasium and
other school facilities.
It is charged by the attorneys that luncheon food and eating
utensils are transferred, some in large garbage cans, from the Negro
school to the 6-room building. The students are compelled to eat
and lunch in halls, classrooms or on the building grounds, They are
not permitted on the grounds of the building occupied by white stu-
dents or to use any of the facilities on the campus. Classes are
dismissed 15 minutes early alternately in the 2 buildings so as to
prevent contact by the Negro end white students.
Attorneys for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund representing the
Negro students in the 3 complaints are Thurgood Marshall and Jack
Greenberg of New York. Local counsel are C, 0, Pearson of Durham,
G. H, Wyche of Charlotte, and J. Kenneth Lee of Greensboro.
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