Racism and Dissent Over Desegregation in the Milwaukee School District, 1960-1968
Date
2024-12-04Author
Dombrowski, Brian H.
Advisor(s)
Jones, Roderick
Mann, John
Ducksworth-Lawton, Selika M.
Jahnke-Wagner, Joanne M.
Turner, Patricia R.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954 rendered racial segregation in public education
illegal. The obvious solution to racial segregation – desegregation – was widely posited as a way
of addressing not only educational inequality but also racial discrimination. Black-led activism
against continued school segregation increased due to the languishing responses from local School
Boards in the wake of the decision. This activism suggests that the Black community strongly
supported racial desegregation in schools and felt it was the solution to Black educational
struggles. Jack Dougherty contests this assumption in his 2004 book More Than One Struggle:
The Evolution of Black School Reform in Milwaukee. Dougherty argues that support for the school
reform movement in Milwaukee was ambivalent and that many activists did not agree with Black
leadership that school desegregation was the best solution for the education of Black children.
Dougherty collected 66 oral histories which included parents, students, educators, as well as
activists who were involved at all levels in the desegregation movement in Milwaukee. This thesis
utilizes these oral histories to expand on Dougherty’s research by specifically focusing on how
racism – both institutionalized and grounded in personal experience – fueled skepticism over
school desegregation. Specifically, it argues that individual experiences with both interpersonal
and especially institutional racism in the Milwaukee Public School System (MPS) negatively
shaped attitudes toward school desegregation among Black Americans in Milwaukee. The oral
interviews reveal, in fact, that Black Americans were particularly conscious about the effects of
institutional racism on education. This thesis not only contributes to our understanding of the
impact of racism on school reform, but it provides a grass-roots perspective on the detrimental
impact of institutional racism.
Subject
Masters theses
Educational change
School integration
School integration--Wisconsin--Milwaukee--History
Students, Black--Social conditions
Oral histories
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/95079Type
Thesis
Description
PDF with text, images, and maps. VI + 103 pages. Includes table of contents (page v) and bibliography (pages 101-103).