Americans battled fiercely over public schools during the “era of integration” that ensued after the US Supreme Court's 1954 ruling in Brown v. Board of Education.Footnote 1 Many of these clashes—in Little Rock, Charlotte, Detroit, and Boston—gained nationwide attention and shaped historians’ narratives of desegregation. A lesser-known controversy over school integration in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in the 1960s and 1970s complicates our understanding of the dynamics of racial politics and education policy in this era, and of the obstacles to school integration. New Brunswick, a small industrial city in central in New Jersey, confronted a host of problems in the 1960s and 1970s, including deindustrialization, suburbanization, and racial conflict. As the New York Times accurately observed in a report on New Brunswick's difficulties in 1972, “While many of the problems facing the city may eventually be solved, it is the problem of the schools that will continue to plague the community.”Footnote 2 New Brunswick High School, which had been racially integrated for decades, became the focal point of a protracted legal and political battle over issues of race relations, integration, “community control,” school consolidation, and busing. Years of wrangling between New Brunswick and the adjacent suburb of North Brunswick exposed deep racial tensions, divided city against suburb, and pitted both against the state government. In 1974, the state of New Jersey permitted hundreds of white students to depart New Brunswick High to enroll in a new, virtually all-white high school in North Brunswick, causing the city's formerly integrated high school to become majority-minority. Afterward, New Brunswick High's white enrollment dwindled until the school enrolled almost exclusively black and Latino students. As the era of integration drew to a close, schools in the two communities became separate and unequal.
An account of how segregation prevailed over integration in New Brunswick complicates our understanding of the dynamics of race relations and education in the 1960s and 1970s. As recent historical accounts of school desegregation have argued, integration was only one of many strategies that black Americans utilized to combat inequality in education. As Jack Dougherty observes in his study of the Milwaukee public schools, the debate over race relations and education was “more than one struggle,” encompassing much more than an effort to desegregate public schools.Footnote 3 Some black parents and students advocated integration and supported busing as a means to achieve racially integrated schools, but others opposed busing and doubted whether integration was attainable or even desirable. Dionne Danns explains in her study of the civil rights struggle in Chicago that whites’ intransigence, coupled with the growing influence of black nationalism, led some black residents to reject desegregation and embrace community control of schools.Footnote 4 Other historians have also observed that a growing number of black residents in many cities renounced integration and advocated community control over public education, demanding more influence over school boards and administrators, better education for black students, and the addition of black history and culture to curricula.Footnote 5 Battles over community control roiled many districts, and the 1968 New York City teachers’ strike, which pitted the United Federation of Teachers against the community-controlled, majority-black schools in the city's Ocean Hill-Brownsville neighborhood, gained nationwide attention, publicizing the stark differences separating black residents from teachers and school administrators, a majority of whom were white.Footnote 6
Examining the decade-long battle over integration in New Brunswick also adds to our understanding of the ways in which structures of political and economic power at both the local and state level shaped the process of school integration and resistance to it. Ansley Erickson's influential recent study of school desegregation in Nashville, for example, elucidates the possibilities and limits of the era of integration by considering the ways in which debates over public education were deeply connected to the city's political economy. Erickson offers a nuanced explanation of the ways in which the city's Board of Education ostensibly sought to implement desegregation but ultimately remade segregation and inequality in three distinct ways: First, in collaboration with city planners and real estate developers, the board drew school boundaries with an eye toward improving some neighborhoods, while neglecting others. Second, schools offered different and unequal curricula to black and white students, steering black students to study vocational subjects to prepare them for their designated role as workers in the city's growing economy. Finally, Erickson perceptively notes that residents created narratives about “de facto segregation” and “white flight” that explained the persistence of segregation as a product of citizens’ choices and obscured the role of political decision-makers and economic interests in maintaining inequality.Footnote 7
An examination of the struggle over public education in New Brunswick draws upon the insights of recent scholarship on desegregation, which emphasizes the importance of community control, political power, and economic interests. Yet the history of race relations and public schools in New Brunswick differs in key respects from many other cities’ experience. The city's high school had been integrated for decades, although most of its elementary schools were racially imbalanced. The city's demographics had not been remade by white flight, and whites remained a majority of the city's residents throughout the 1960s and 1970s. Hundreds of local white students attended parochial or private high schools instead of New Brunswick High.Footnote 8 Still, whites remained a majority of New Brunswick High's students (79 percent in 1968, declining to 60 percent in 1973) because the nearby, nearly all-white communities of North Brunswick and Milltown, which did not have high schools of their own, participated in a regionalized school district that bused students to New Brunswick in an arrangement known as a sending-receiving relationship.Footnote 9 Tensions over race relations in the public schools grew in the 1960s and exploded in 1969, when residents of North Brunswick, whose children had attended high school in New Brunswick for a century, invoked “local control” of education and voted to build their own high school. The creation of a suburban high school would siphon away approximately seven hundred white students from New Brunswick High, transforming it into a majority-black school. Many New Brunswick residents predicted that the suburban white students’ departure would in turn lead white students from New Brunswick to leave the school as well.
Some white residents of New Brunswick and the city's Board of Education urged the state government to preserve racial integration in the city's schools and sought either to preserve the existing sending-receiving relationship or to merge New Brunswick and North Brunswick into a consolidated school district. They argued that merging the districts and continuing to bus students between “the Brunswicks” offered the only means to maintain racially integrated schools and comply with the state Department of Education's policy of ensuring racial integration. While some white residents sincerely supported racial integration, many also worried that the city's economy, which had already declined as a result of deindustrialization and suburbanization, would suffer even more losses if the public schools became majority-minority. White residents of North Brunswick, on the other hand, often criticized racial trouble in New Brunswick High but also believed that creating a local high school would enhance their suburb's appeal, future growth, and housing values. Issues of race, real estate, and political economy were entwined in the debate over public schools in the Brunswicks.Footnote 10
Members of New Brunswick's minority communities initially fought to preserve integration and resisted North Brunswick's effort to sever its relationship with the city's schools.Footnote 11 But a growing number of blacks and Latinos soon renounced their support for integration and espoused community control as the best strategy for improving educational opportunities for minority students. Racial integration, they argued, did not entail racial equality or necessarily improve educational quality. Black and Latino parents and students complained that school administrators and teachers treated minority students unfairly, discouraging them from enrolling in college prep classes and shunting them into vocational courses. The school's faculty, administration, and the Board of Education contained few minority members. Black and Latino history and culture were absent from the curriculum.
The “battle of the Brunswicks” resulted in eighty-eight hearings before the state Board of Education, provoked repeated protests and troubles in New Brunswick's junior high and high school, and convulsed the city's politics. As the battle dragged on, local residents and New Jersey state officials created different narratives to explain their view of the struggle over race relations and public education. Black residents of New Brunswick recounted their struggle to wrest control over their local schools from an educational bureaucracy that espoused racially integrated schools but disserved black students. White suburbanites told a story of an urban high school engulfed in turmoil, which justified their demand to build a separate school. State education officials proclaimed their support for school integration and yet, step-by-step, permitted North Brunswick to build its own high school, claiming that they were effectively powerless to mandate integration in the face of sustained opposition from residents, white and black. Ultimately, these differing stories culminated in the same ironic ending: during the era of integration, a new, nearly all-white high school opened in North Brunswick; New Brunswick's formerly integrated public high school became majority-minority; and, as some local residents had predicted, local white students’ enrollment declined until the school enrolled only minority students. In short, education in the Brunswicks became separate and unequal.
Hub City and Garden State
New Brunswick, which billed itself as central New Jersey's bustling “Hub City,” confronted political and racial upheaval, suburbanization, and economic decline in the 1960s and 1970s. The black population in New Brunswick grew steadily throughout the twentieth century. In 1960, blacks made up 15.4 percent of the city's population. In 1970, that percentage had risen to 22.7 percent; in 1980, it was 28.5 percent. Latinos, principally Puerto Ricans, were 3.5 percent of the city's population in 1970. Meanwhile, the white population declined from 84.2 percent in 1960, to 75.9 percent in 1970, and then to 63.1 percent in 1980.Footnote 12 According to one estimate, the city lost five thousand jobs in these decades, as factories closed and stores moved to suburban shopping centers. The city's poverty rate was 14.4 percent in 1970, but 19.9 percent for blacks and 26.6 percent for Puerto Ricans.Footnote 13 As businesses and some white residents moved to suburbia, the economy and tax base of the “Hub City” declined.Footnote 14
New Brunswick's public schools had been integrated since the 1880s, and they remained integrated into the 1970s. On the other hand, as Davison Douglas notes, segregated schools were common in New Jersey and in the North. The state of New Jersey began to address the problem of school segregation before the federal government. The New Jersey Supreme Court declared racially segregated schools unconstitutional in its 1944 ruling in the Trenton case of Hedgepeth v. Board of Education of Trenton; three years later, an amendment to the state constitution prohibited segregated schools.Footnote 15 In 1954, the US Supreme Court's Brown ruling declared segregated public schools “inherently unequal,” and the following year, the Court stipulated that desegregation proceed with “all deliberate speed.”Footnote 16 While Brown and the ensuing civil rights movement pointed toward racial integration, suburbanization forestalled racial equality by creating and reinforcing de facto segregation.Footnote 17 As many whites moved to the suburbs, blacks and Latinos remained concentrated in New Jersey's cities. The subtitle of Walter Greason's book states bluntly that “the suburbs ended the civil rights movement in New Jersey.”Footnote 18 But New Brunswick's schools were not remade simply by an inexorable process of suburbanization, “white flight,” or de facto residential segregation, but by a complex and contentious debate over racial integration in public education and by a series of decisions in which policymakers allowed segregation to prevail.
The issues of race, public schools, and suburbs versus cities roiled New Jersey politics in the 1960s and 1970s, as the state government attempted to ensure school integration.Footnote 19 The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled in Booker v. Board of Education of Plainfield (1965) that the state commissioner of education possessed broad authority to redress de facto as well as de jure segregation.Footnote 20 In 1967, Commissioner of Education Carl Marburger, an ardent proponent of racial integration, determined that many of New Jersey's school districts should be consolidated into single districts in order to create larger, more efficient districts and to comply with the federal government's mandate to integrate public education. To achieve racial balance within these larger districts, Marburger advocated busing, a proposal that provoked a firestorm in New Jersey, as it did in many states and cities. Marburger's support for consolidating school districts was not prompted solely by his concerns about integration. State Department of Education officials believed that New Jersey had too many school districts, many of which lacked high schools of their own. Larger districts and larger schools, they insisted, were more efficient and offered students a more comprehensive education. The Department of Education made its most emphatic case for creating regionalized and consolidated school districts in its well-publicized and controversial 1969 report (the “Mancuso Report”), which declared that reorganizing and consolidating school districts and granting the state government a larger role in funding public schools were “necessary for eliminating educational deficiencies in New Jersey.” Acknowledging that local communities would balk at consolidation, the report urged that the state government exercise its power to “mandate” the creation of larger school districts.Footnote 21
The prospect of enforced regionalization, consolidation, and busing led opponents to push back against the state's authority and to assert local control over public education, making public schools a central issue in the political struggle between cities, suburbs, and the state government at a moment when suburban voters were gaining the upper hand in New Jersey politics. The New York Times reported that the 1967 campaign for the state legislature (New Jersey holds elections in odd-numbered years) “was dominated by the Republican charge that the Democratic administration of Governor Richard J. Hughes planned to bus white children from the suburbs to the cities to achieve racial integration in the schools,” even though both political parties strongly opposed Marburger's proposal to consolidate school districts. On election day, Republicans turned a 2-to-1 Democratic majority into a 3-to-1 GOP advantage in the New Jersey Senate and Assembly.Footnote 22
Racial discrimination and blacks’ protest against it also reshaped politics in New Jersey and New Brunswick in the 1960s and 1970s. In July 1967, blacks’ determination to fight against inequality erupted into six days of protest in Newark—an upheaval that left twenty-six people dead and protests spreading to several New Jersey cities.Footnote 23 In the wake of the Newark unrest, black youths in New Brunswick, twenty-five miles to the south, voiced their anger at public school officials, unemployment, and lack of recreational opportunities. Black students and parents contended that the schools gave black students an inferior education and were quick to suspend or expel students for any infraction of school rules. As one black teenager put it, administrators could and would “use any excuse to get rid of us.”Footnote 24 On July 17, hundreds of black youths took to the streets in New Brunswick, where they were confronted by over 150 police officers. The protesters vandalized and looted several businesses, but a full-scale riot did not break out. The following night, two hundred protesters engaged in a tense standoff with police and then confronted Mayor Patricia Sheehan, who mollified the crowd by vowing to improve race relations in the city. New Brunswick teetered on the brink of violence in 1967, yet did not slip over that brink. The Kerner Commission, appointed by President Lyndon Johnson to study the urban protests of 1967, praised New Brunswick officials for averting conflict instead of escalating it.Footnote 25 Although a potential explosion was defused in 1967, racial and economic problems continued to trouble New Brunswick throughout the 1970s, and local officials and residents worried that even a minor incident could touch off violence.Footnote 26 After the city's underlying racial tensions were laid bare in 1967, the combination of poisoned race relations, suburbanization, deindustrialization, and declining tax revenues placed enormous strain on the city and its school system through the late 1960s and 1970s.
We Are Not Going to Beg
After the 1967 protests, blacks in New Brunswick pressed Mayor Sheehan to improve race relations and insisted that the public schools become more responsive to black students. Board of Education meetings, previously sleepy affairs, became agitated, as black parents and students espoused the rhetoric of community control and demanded more say over the city's public schools. In November 1967, Rev. Edward L. Warner, chairman of the New Brunswick Human Rights Commission, asked the board to add black history to the schools’ curriculum so that every black student would be “given the knowledge and values of what he is and what he stands for.”Footnote 27 Black students embraced black nationalism more readily than did their elders in the 1960s, and they played a key role in pressing for change in New Brunswick's schools.Footnote 28 In May 1968, Learline Jackson, a member of the New Brunswick Urban League's Youth Council, addressed the school board to urge the teaching of black history and better treatment of black students. The board agreed to add black history to the curriculum in the fall, and board president Edward Lipman vowed, “If there is racism in our faculty, we are going to nail it.”Footnote 29 In June, David Harris, president of the New Brunswick Urban League, demanded that the board create a black advisory committee. When Theresa Schrum, president of the high school PTA, objected, saying “all you say is ‘we demand,’” Harris replied, “White people will have to get used to us saying ‘we demand.’ We are not going to beg.”Footnote 30 The board voted to create a twenty-eight-member Community Advisory Committee made up of representatives of several black and Latino organizations.Footnote 31 In December, high school student Kelly Jones blasted the board, accusing the schools of causing many black and Puerto Rican students to drop out. Jones urged the high school to hire more black teachers (it had only one) because “we come from different environments and most of these white teachers are not equipped to relate to us.”Footnote 32
The assassination of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in April 1968 provoked protests at Rutgers University and New Brunswick High. Rutgers enrolled few black students, and King's murder led many students to demand that the university increase its number of minority students and faculty members.Footnote 33 Black students at New Brunswick High, upset that the public schools remained open during King's funeral, walked out of school in protest, and vandals smashed downtown store windows and hurled rocks at passing cars in one of the city's black neighborhoods. Rutgers president Mason Welch Gross helped defuse racial tension on campus and in the city by announcing that the university would begin enrolling more disadvantaged black students from Newark, Camden, and New Brunswick. Rutgers's commitment to diversifying its student body quelled protest, but hardly resolved the underlying problems in the city or its schools.Footnote 34
A Full-Scale Riot
In March 1969, simmering racial issues in New Brunswick boiled over on the Rutgers campus, in town, and in the schools. In early March, Rutgers students accused the university of failing to implement the reforms promised in 1968, and demanded that more black students be admitted and that African American history and culture be added to the curriculum.Footnote 35 Protest on campus spilled over into town, as students and residents argued bitterly about local government, the police, and the schools. A group of white residents founded Concerned and Responsible Citizens (CRC) to oppose blacks’ calls for change in New Brunswick. The CRC criticized Mayor Sheehan's oversight of the police force and the schools, and presented her with a list of ten demands, titled “P.O.W.E.R.,” which stood for “Protection of White Equal Rights.” The CRC demanded that the mayor impose a curfew, opposed her decision to create a civilian review board to examine allegations of police misconduct, and insisted that she grant the CRC veto authority over the hiring of police officers. According to the local newspaper, the Home News, Mayor Sheehan “appeared shaken” by the vehemence of the CRC members.Footnote 36 On March 13, upwards of a thousand white residents packed a CRC meeting at the Hungarian American Athletic Club, where, the newspaper reported, “Most speakers called for action against Negroes they claim have made the city's streets and schools unsafe.” Mayor Sheehan did not attend the meeting but sent a statement of her views, which the audience booed.Footnote 37 Patrolman Jesse Biczi warned that America was being “overtaken from within,” and declared that he had “never met a good American Negro.” Police Chief Ralph Petrone suspended Biczi for his remarks, and the city's eight black police officers resigned, stating that they would not serve alongside Biczi.Footnote 38 Vincent DiPane, a former police officer and harsh critic of Mayor Sheehan's handling of the 1967 protest, organized a petition to recall the mayor and the entire City Commission, accusing them of failing “to protect the citizens and their property.”Footnote 39
Tensions at Rutgers and in the city reverberated through the halls of New Brunswick High and Junior High, and black and white students boycotted school and scuffled repeatedly. Black students accused school administrators of discrimination and claimed that the Board of Education was concerned only with retaining white students, rather than improving the quality of education. White students charged that the schools had become unsafe. On March 18, black and white students met separately at New Brunswick Junior High to discuss racial issues in the school. The school exploded in “a full-scale riot” when approximately one hundred black students disrupted the white students’ meeting, hurling dishes and chairs, breaking windows, causing an estimated $4,000 in damage, and injuring several students, teachers, police officers, and passersby.Footnote 40 Black and white students at New Brunswick High also engaged in a series of protests, fights, and acts of vandalism. The school board ordered both schools closed temporarily in response to racial strife that, according to the New York Times, “has all but paralyzed the educational process.”Footnote 41
At an acrimonious meeting of the City Commission the day after the melee in the junior high, Mayor Sheehan declared, “We have got to work out how we are going to live in this community, black and white—it's not going to be black versus white, and it can't be young versus old.”Footnote 42 While local officials, educators, and parents met to discuss the turmoil in the schools, Neighborhood House, a meeting place for black citizens and organizations, sustained arson damage, prompting widespread suspicion that “the Nabe” had been set ablaze in retaliation against blacks’ expression of their grievances.Footnote 43
After more than a week of upheaval, an uneasy calm returned to the public schools, if not to the city. On March 21, two thousand high school students, black and white, staged a “walk-out/walk-in,” singing as they marched out of school arm in arm, then returned to class in a demonstration of racial harmony. Senior class president Louis Marchetto proclaimed that the students had “unified the school and the community” by proving that blacks and whites wanted to be educated together.Footnote 44 Adults in New Brunswick were less hopeful. Some three hundred CRC supporters met that evening to endorse a recall vote against Mayor Sheehan, and one member, Mike De Salvo, ominously threatened to retaliate against protesters by spilling “blood in the city.”Footnote 45
The Battle of the Brunswicks
The remainder of the school year passed without serious incident, and the Board of Education agreed to “integrate” the curriculum by adding more black and Latino history.Footnote 46 When classes began in September 1969, however, fights broke out between black and white students, and some two hundred whites refused to attend school until they received assurance that school officials would protect them from what they termed “black terrorism.”Footnote 47 On September 29, more than two hundred high school students, both black and white, stayed home to protest the turmoil in the school. Amid these protests, superintendent of schools Morris Epps ordered the schools closed because the district's insurance policy had expired and, owing to the high probability of vandalism and violence, no insurer would underwrite the schools. Mayor Sheehan and Governor Hughes intervened, persuading the insurer to renew the schools’ policy so the schools could remain open.Footnote 48
Racial tensions in New Brunswick led residents in the adjacent town of North Brunswick, a nearly all-white community that bused its students to New Brunswick High, to launch plans in 1969 to build a local high school and middle school. North Brunswick's population had grown from 10,099 in 1960 to 16,691 in 1970. Nearly 98 percent of the town's residents were white. While North Brunswick was not affluent, it was significantly wealthier than New Brunswick, where one-fifth of black residents were impoverished.Footnote 49 In October, the North Brunswick Board of Education voted unanimously to initiate the formal process to create a local high school and passed a resolution complaining that sending districts had no voice in the policies of receiving schools, calling this arrangement nothing less than “taxation without representation.” The Board of Education of nearby Milltown, an all-white community that bused students to New Brunswick High, also voted to send students to North Brunswick High when it opened.Footnote 50 To justify their decision for building their own high school and defying the state government's effort to compel them to participate in a regionalized or consolidated school district, North Brunswick residents invoked “local control” over education. New Jersey, with its nearly six hundred localities and more than six hundred school districts, has a deeply entrenched tradition of “home rule” or “local control”—as Governor Brendan Byrne observed in the 1970s, “home rule is a religion in New Jersey.”Footnote 51
North Brunswick's decision to create its own high school and withdraw its students from New Brunswick High collided with the New Brunswick school board's effort to maintain its racially integrated high school and the New Jersey Department of Education's goal of ensuring integration in public education. In November, the Board of Education and the Commissioner issued a mandate, requiring school districts to devise plans to remedy racially-imbalanced schools.Footnote 52 The department permitted the North Brunswick board to continue planning its new high school only on the condition that the school's opening would not result in racially segregated schools in the Brunswicks. North Brunswick's determination to build its own school, though, almost invariably ran counter to the state's goal of racial integration.
The state's mandate on desegregation had implications not only for New Brunswick High but also for the city's elementary schools. Although New Brunswick's high school and junior high were integrated, five of its eight elementary schools were attended overwhelmingly by white or by minority students (Table 1). Because North Brunswick operated its own elementary schools, it did not bus elementary students to New Brunswick.Footnote 53
Source: Minutes, Feb. 3, 1970, New Brunswick Board of Education; and Minutes, April 7, 1970, New Brunswick Board of Education.
As Andrew Highsmith and Ansley Erickson point out, school segregation did not result solely from residential segregation. Local governments and real estate developers often promoted and enforced racially segregated neighborhoods, but school officials also sought to create “community schools,” which would serve as cultural hubs for neighborhood residents, and drew school district boundaries to create racially homogenous schools. The New Brunswick school board considered the racial makeup of the city's elementary schools when drawing school boundaries.Footnote 54
In February 1970, the New Brunswick school board, declaring that it would “make every effort to bring about a better balance among the races,” unanimously resolved to comply with the state's Mandate on Desegregation.Footnote 55 “If the law says integrate, we must integrate,” board president Edward Lipman stated the following month, as the board allocated $100,000 for busing in its budget for the 1970–1971 school year.Footnote 56 Plans to bus elementary school students upset many white residents. Mrs. Henry Hartmann, president of the Woodrow Wilson Elementary School PTA, objected to busing, stating that educational and counseling programs could more effectively improve race relations (95 percent of Wilson students were white).Footnote 57 Several black residents and educators, however, supported integration. Louis Diggs, president of the Nathan Hale Elementary School PTA, and Henry Daniels, principal of Lord Stirling Elementary School, favored busing (95 percent of Hale School students and 91 percent of Stirling students were black or Latino). “If the students are going to live together,” Diggs stated, “we must integrate the schools.”Footnote 58
The New Brunswick Board of Education strove to integrate its elementary schools, to prevent the construction of a high school in North Brunswick, and to merge the Brunswicks into a single school district, but the city's soured race relations accelerated the growth of suburbs, the construction of suburban schools, and de facto segregation. The board argued that the creation of a high school in North Brunswick would violate the federal and state governments’ commitment to integration: New Brunswick High would become a majority-black school, while 96 percent of North Brunswick High students would be white. An exodus of North Brunswick students might also cause many white parents in New Brunswick to withdraw their children from the high school, and would deprive New Brunswick High of the more than $700,000 in tuition paid by North Brunswick residents. For all these reasons, board president Eli Saltz vowed in May 1970 to “do everything possible to have North Brunswick stay.”Footnote 59
The following month, North Brunswick voters passed by nearly two-to-one a $9.8 million bond issue to construct a local junior high and high school. Residents of North Brunswick were eager to have their own school and stop paying tuition to send their children to New Brunswick High. The high school had also become overcrowded, forcing the New Brunswick Board of Education to divide students into two sessions beginning in the fall of 1970. As the Home News reported, though, North Brunswick voters supported the bond principally because of the “racial disorder that has plagued the city school.”Footnote 60
In July 1970, black youths in New Brunswick took to the streets on three consecutive nights to protest race relations in the city. The protest erupted after the city government canceled a dance scheduled at Memorial Homes, a low-income housing complex, citing violence that had ensued after a dance there the previous week. Youths gathered at Memorial Homes and at an office of the local antipoverty agency to discuss their frustrations: no jobs, poor housing, mistreatment by school administrators and the police, and a lack of recreational opportunities. Afterward, the youths marched into the business district, shouting “All power to the people!” and “Death to the pigs!” They smashed several store windows and set fire to Sapiro Auto Parts, which suffered serious damage. Mayor Sheehan responded by imposing a curfew, setting roadblocks along the highways into New Brunswick, and reinforcing the city's police force with officers from nearby communities.Footnote 61
Mayor Sheehan, facing a tough reelection campaign in 1970, was far less conciliatory to the protesters than she had been three years earlier. In 1967, the mayor listened patiently as black teenagers vented their grievances; now, she accused them of committing “vicious mischief” and declared that violence and disorder “will not be tolerated.”Footnote 62 Black residents considered the protest a response to the mayor's failure to improve race relations in the city. The Black Voice, a student newspaper at Rutgers University, dismissed Sheehan's claim that a few rabble-rousers were needlessly stirring up trouble as “a damn and vicious lie,” declaring that “the people” were rising up against discrimination.Footnote 63 A local alternative newspaper, All You Can Eat, accused Sheehan of using the protest “as an excuse for continued police harassment of the black and Puerto Rican community” and to aid her reelection bid by appealing to the city's white majority.Footnote 64 Political considerations undoubtedly impelled Sheehan to take a tougher stance in 1970 than she had in 1967. Rival candidate Ralph Muehlig's “Save Our City” platform promised to restore “law and order” in New Brunswick, and the mayor's most strident white opponents reviled her as the “African Queen” for negotiating with black protesters in 1967.Footnote 65 In November, Sheehan won reelection, defeating Muehlig by a margin of five hundred votes out of nearly ten thousand cast.Footnote 66
Busing and Consolidation: “The people are absolutely against it.”
Busing generated sharp opposition nationally, in New Jersey, and in New Brunswick. In April 1971, the US Supreme Court's landmark ruling in Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education upheld the constitutionality of busing as a means to implement school desegregation.Footnote 67 But Swann proved a Pyrrhic victory for supporters of integration, provoking a furious backlash against busing from many whites. Consolidating the Brunswicks into a single school district and busing students offered a feasible means to attain racial integration. The two communities were adjacent, and the proposed North Brunswick High School lay only 2.6 miles from New Brunswick High by roadway, while the physical distance between the schools was only 1.5 miles. (New Brunswick's high school building, opened in 1964, was located near the boundary with North Brunswick to encourage the suburb's residents to continue sending their children to the high school.) Two months after the Swann decision, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled in Jenkins v. Township of Morris School District that the commissioner of education possessed the authority to mandate sending-receiving relationships or regionalization of school districts if these measures were “necessary for fulfillment of the State's educational and desegregation policies.”Footnote 68 The Department of Education temporarily restrained the North Brunswick Board of Education from proceeding with the bid process for building a high school, relenting only after the board promised to “work actively” with the New Brunswick board to assure that the school would not result in racial segregation.Footnote 69
Despite this promise not to create segregated schools, residents of North Brunswick fought to prevent the state Department of Education from merging the communities’ school districts and busing students to achieve integration. In October 1971, the North Brunswick Board of Education unanimously passed a resolution endorsing local control and opposing the state's authority to consolidate or regionalize school districts unless local residents voted to approve the merger.Footnote 70 New Brunswick Board of Education president Saltz accused North Brunswick of reneging on its promise to cooperate with New Brunswick, stating that the suburb's residents were “not sincerely interested” in integration.Footnote 71 Battles over integration and busing in the Brunswicks, as elsewhere, were not solely about race, but also about class. As both Gary Orfield and Ronald P. Formisano point out, many working-class and lower-middle-class whites felt that more affluent Americans and policymakers were imposing school desegregation on them.Footnote 72 North Brunswick was wealthier than New Brunswick, but it was hardly affluent. Nearly a third of its residents had low or moderate incomes, and most parents had little choice but to enroll their children in the local public schools, including New Brunswick High.Footnote 73 Although North Brunswick had bused students to New Brunswick High School for years, when the New Jersey commissioner of education proposed busing as a means to preserve integrated high schools in the Brunswicks, many North Brunswick residents complained that the state was foisting integrated schools on them.
Crucially, many black and Latino students and parents in New Brunswick also turned against busing and regionalization to endorse community control of public education, but for reasons different from white residents of North Brunswick. They recognized that North Brunswick residents were determined to build their own high school and that many white residents of New Brunswick would likely refuse to send their children to a majority-minority high school if the North Brunswick students withdrew. Embracing the ideas of black and Latino nationalism, they renounced their support for integration and for merging their high school with North Brunswick's and declared that their paramount goal was to improve the education for minority students in the local public schools. They appropriated New Jersey's tradition of local control and began to advocate for community control of the city's public schools.Footnote 74 For blacks and Latinos, community control meant adding black and Latino history to the curriculum, hiring more black and Latino teachers, and adding more minority members to the Board of Education, whose members were appointed by the mayor. From 1966 to 1970, the board had a lone black member; from 1971 through 1973 it had two, but whites remained a majority. Instead of petitioning the state government to preserve integration, minority parents and students now sought to make the schools’ curriculum and personnel more responsive to minority students.
In October 1971, black and Puerto Rican students staged a walkout from New Brunswick High to protest the school's insensitivity to their concerns. The students called the walkout in response to an issue that looms large in the high school pecking order: black students complained that only one of the school's eighteen cheerleaders was black. When school officials agreed to hold tryouts for a new cheer squad, a fight erupted between white and black students. According to the Black Voice, police officers assaulted and arrested black students but did not intervene against white students. After this incident, black and Puerto Rican students boycotted classes. A few days later, they attended the New Brunswick Board of Education meeting to present their list of twenty “demands,” which included dismissing Principal William Lindstrom; hiring more black and Puerto Rican teachers, counselors, and security guards; adding classes in black and Puerto Rican history; enrolling more minority students in college prep courses; and appointing more minority members to the board. The board rejected the students’ demands and refused to negotiate with them until they returned to classes.Footnote 75 Black and Puerto Rican parents, organizations, and ministers supported the students’ protest, as did the Black Voice, which accused the school board of seeking to maintain the school's appeal to white residents, rather than serving the needs of minority students. White residents, according to the paper, worried that an exodus of students to North Brunswick High would cause New Brunswick High to hit “the ‘tipping point,’ when the school's population becomes so Black and Puerto Rican that whites leave the community.” Black and Puerto Rican parents charged that school administrators catered to the interests of white students and residents and subjected minority students to unfair treatment and an inferior education.Footnote 76
Troubles between black and white students repeatedly disrupted New Brunswick High in the spring of 1972. On March 1, a fight broke out, resulting in the suspension of seventeen students. On March 7, many North Brunswick parents kept their children out of New Brunswick High, charging that the school could not ensure students’ safety.Footnote 77 After more fights broke out in April, the North Brunswick Board of Education declared the high school unsafe, recommended that North Brunswick parents keep their children home from school, and prohibited school buses from transporting students to New Brunswick.Footnote 78 The North Brunswick Chamber of Commerce also encouraged parents and students to boycott New Brunswick High, and urged the North Brunswick Board of Education to withhold tuition payment for the sending-receiving relationship with New Brunswick.Footnote 79
Suburbanization and racial tensions were accelerating demographic change in New Brunswick and its schools, as white enrollment in the city's junior high and high school declined in the early 1970s. In 1968, 79 percent of the high school's students were white; by 1973, that figure had slipped to 60 percent.Footnote 80 White parents in North Brunswick and Milltown were also withdrawing their children from New Brunswick High: in 1966, 90 percent of North Brunswick students and 86 percent of Milltown students attended New Brunswick High. When the school year began in 1972, those figures had shrunk to 66 and 26 percent.Footnote 81
Rather than resist declining white enrollment, black residents of New Brunswick, like whites in North Brunswick, organized to oppose regionalization and consolidation, and advocated for local control. Residents organized the Black Home and School Organization (BHSO), which declared that good schools were more important than racial integration.Footnote 82 In May 1972, Rev. W. Emanuel Barrett of the Ebenezer Baptist Church denounced regionalization, informing the board that “the people are absolutely against it.” Charles Gray, assistant director of the local chapter of the Urban League, declared that “regionalization is not in the best interest of the people.”Footnote 83 The following month, the Greater New Brunswick Clergy Association submitted a petition to the board declaring that regionalization or consolidation “would be a serious backward step in terms of human relations in our community” and “should be dropped immediately.”Footnote 84
Both the New Brunswick Board of Education and the state government remained committed to consolidation and integration. In 1972, the New Brunswick Board of Education hired Charles Durant, a black man, as superintendent. Board members hoped that the new superintendent would help defuse racial tensions in the community, but his appointment seemed only to worsen them. Durant's staunch support for continuing the relationship between the New Brunswick and North Brunswick schools antagonized many blacks, and he endured outright racism from some whites. Durant moved into a middle-class white neighborhood, where he and his family confronted repeated slurs and harassment.Footnote 85
The New Jersey Department of Education's commitment to school integration and consolidation provoked opposition in the Brunswicks and many other communities across the state. In June 1972, Republican governor William Cahill stunned New Jerseyans by nominating Carl Marburger, champion of integration, regionalization, consolidation, and busing, for another term as commissioner of education. The controversial nominee inflamed an already heated debate over the state's authority versus local control of schools, and the New Jersey Senate rejected his reappointment—a first in the state's history. As the New York Times observed, senators’ opposition to Marburger stemmed from “an emotional reaction against the racially charged issue of school busing.”Footnote 86
The tide of public opinion had turned decisively against consolidation and busing, and blacks in New Brunswick had become outspoken critics of the New Brunswick Board of Education. The BHSO not only opposed regionalization, but urged the board to rethink the fundamental mission of the city's schools. In the spring of 1973, the BHSO complained that the board was still waging a futile effort to keep white students enrolled in New Brunswick's schools, even though the school district “has been completely abandoned by whites.” Meanwhile, “the public school system has failed miserably in their attempt to achieve their educational goals for these [black and Latino] students.” The BHSO insisted that the Board of Education “must have the empowerment of the impoverished black and Puerto Rican community at the core of their school goals.”Footnote 87 BHSO president Sandra Willis accused the board of supporting regionalization to enhance its own power and relegating black students’ education to “second place.”Footnote 88
In April 1973, the New Jersey Supreme Court intervened in the debate over public education, issuing its landmark decision in Robinson v. Cahill, which ruled that wide disparity in expenditures per student between urban and suburban school districts violated the state constitution's guarantee of a “thorough and efficient system of free public schools.”Footnote 89 Because public schools’ funding derived principally from local property taxes, suburban schools had considerably more resources than urban schools, whose revenues had shrunk along with cities’ population and tax base.Footnote 90 The court's decision seemed to necessitate an increase in state aid for urban school districts, potentially offsetting the decline in revenue that would result if the state allowed students from North Brunswick to leave New Brunswick High School.
When the new North Brunswick middle and high school building opened to grades seven through nine in September 1973, residents petitioned the New Jersey Department of Education to permit tenth graders to move immediately from New Brunswick High to the new facility (juniors and seniors were slated to complete their education at New Brunswick High).Footnote 91 The New York Times reported the bitter controversy on page one: “School Showdown Looms in New Brunswick Dispute.” The New Brunswick Board of Education opposed allowing North Brunswick's tenth graders to leave New Brunswick High, leading North Brunswick superintendent Arthur Wise to reply caustically, “What they're doing to their own people is an educational abortion.”Footnote 92 The Citizens’ Action Group, an organization of North Brunswick parents, defended “the right of a community to control the education of its children” and urged parents to stop sending their children to New Brunswick High.Footnote 93 Three busloads of North Brunswick parents, who dubbed themselves Citizens for Quality Education, traveled to the state capital in Trenton to deliver a petition, signed by two thousand residents, urging the commissioner of education to allow sophomores to attend North Brunswick High. To dramatize their cause, North Brunswick parents organized a one-day boycott of New Brunswick High in September. The following month the North Brunswick Board of Education, citing a “dangerous atmosphere” and overcrowding in New Brunswick High (built to accommodate 1,469 students, the school enrolled 1,879), again prohibited buses from transporting students to New Brunswick High.Footnote 94 The North Brunswick board unanimously passed a resolution charging that New Brunswick had reneged on the districts’ 1971 agreement to cooperate in maintaining racial integration and alleging that its members had signed the agreement only “under duress” because they feared that Commissioner Marburger would otherwise deny them authorization to plan and construct a new high school.Footnote 95
The New Brunswick Board of Education continued to urge the New Jersey Department of Education to prevent North Brunswick from removing its students from New Brunswick High. It conceded that the New Brunswick schools had experienced racial troubles but pointed out that similar problems had occurred in many cities. Creating separate high schools for white and black students, it informed the State Board of Education, offered no solution: “a separation will deprive both groups of students of the advantage inherent in a fully integrated educational experience.”Footnote 96 In October 1973, Robert Greenwood, the Department of Education official responsible for examining the dispute between the Brunswicks, recommended that the department approve the transfer of North Brunswick's tenth graders out of New Brunswick High and that North Brunswick High accept some black students from New Brunswick in order to preserve a measure of racial integration. North Brunswick residents hailed Greenwood's recommendation, but New Brunswick school administrators castigated it as a step backward for racial equality.Footnote 97 New Brunswick High principal Donald Banchik blasted the proposed departure of the students and took a swipe at their parents, warning that “these students will receive an insulated, isolated education irrelevant to what's really happening in the world around them today. And when these kids eventually become parents themselves their perspective will be as narrow and prejudicial as their own parents’ today.”Footnote 98
Black residents of New Brunswick, however, advocated community control and opposed busing black students to North Brunswick to create racial diversity in the suburban high school. Only days after Greenwood issued his recommendations, BHSO members picketed the offices of the New Brunswick Public Schools, and nearly all of the high school's eight hundred black students boycotted classes.Footnote 99 At the Board of Education's monthly meeting, David Harris, BHSO member and former president of the New Brunswick Urban League, accused the board of being concerned principally with maintaining white enrollment. Harris stated that he had no objection to the white students’ departure from New Brunswick High but warned minority residents that the city's white majority would balk at paying taxes to support the public schools if most of their students were blacks and Latinos. As a result, racial minorities “would be dependent on a hostile majority population for the necessary resources to educate its [their] children.”Footnote 100 While black residents advocated community control, they foresaw that whites’ support for the schools would likely decline if the schools became majority-minority.Footnote 101
The battle between the Brunswicks had become a focal point of New Jerseyans’ response to changing race relations, urban decline, and suburbanization, and emerged as a major issue in the 1973 gubernatorial campaign, even though both the Republican and Democratic parties opposed busing. Republican candidate Charles Sandman kicked off his campaign by accusing Democratic rival Brendan Byrne of favoring consolidation and busing, proclaiming, “Home rule is a sacred thing in New Jersey. Those school districts that don't want to be consolidated don't have to be.” Byrne also supported home rule and opposed busing.Footnote 102 In order to declare their opposition to busing, both candidates attended the dedication ceremony for North Brunswick High School on October 28, only days before the election.Footnote 103
On November 30, the Department of Education's acting commissioner, Edward Kilpatrick, adopted examiner Greenwood's recommendations, with one significant difference: he approved the immediate transfer of all tenth graders from New Brunswick High School to North Brunswick High. Kilpatrick's decision seemed to please no one. Black and white residents of New Brunswick, who had often disagreed over the city's schools, united to oppose this apparent step toward consolidating the high schools, and black parents called on the acting commissioner to “permit communities to educate their own students.” White parents in North Brunswick objected to Kilpatrick's decision to bus the tenth graders to their school.Footnote 104 North Brunswick continued to press its case for local control, battling the New Brunswick Board of Education and the state government. In March 1974, the North Brunswick Board of Education audaciously announced that it would no longer pay tuition to send students to New Brunswick and declared that all high school students from North Brunswick would attend North Brunswick High in the fall. The Department of Education sternly informed the board that it had no authority to withdraw its students from New Brunswick High without the state's approval.Footnote 105
Years of legal wrangling over consolidation culminated in hearings before the Department of Education in the summer and fall of 1974. Despite intense rancor between the Brunswicks, the New Brunswick Board of Education argued implausibly that the city and the adjacent suburb were effectively “one community,” and so should operate a single school district. The New Brunswick board advocated implementing regionalization or consolidation and busing, without which, it warned, New Jersey would become “an apartheid society; the cities will be black and the suburbs will be white.”Footnote 106 But white residents of North Brunswick and black residents of New Brunswick opposed consolidation and supported local control, citing the US Supreme Court's recent ruling in Milliken v. Bradley, which declared busing children from one school district to another an impermissible remedy for de facto school segregation.Footnote 107 North Brunswick residents contended that no educational research had demonstrated conclusively that integration benefited students and stated that “little, if any benefit would flow from mixing the races in an atmosphere of hostility.” Jack Borrus, attorney for the North Brunswick Board of Education, pointed out that whites in New Brunswick had effectively rejected their local public schools, estimating that at least three thousand of the city's white students (in all grades) now attended private schools. North Brunswick called black witnesses from New Brunswick who also opposed regionalization or outright consolidation and espoused community control, stating that “their goal and obligation is to cater to the needs of their own black pupils and that any sharing of this responsibility with neighboring white municipalities would only further dilute and frustrate this prime objective.”Footnote 108
In August 1974, only three weeks before the start of the school year, Commissioner of Education Fred G. Burke issued an interim order permitting all students from North Brunswick to attend high school in their hometown during the upcoming year.Footnote 109 North Brunswick residents cheered Burke's decision, but Frank Totten, president of the New Brunswick Teachers Association, castigated it for leaving both school districts segregated and “in a position just like the South was in.”Footnote 110 The New Brunswick Board of Education vowed to continue its battle for consolidation, but the Home News, which had previously supported regionalization and integration, now urged the board to drop its suit against North Brunswick.Footnote 111 In October, Commissioner Burke permanently terminated the sending-receiving relationship between the school districts. Burke wearily observed that the “tortuous process” of adjudicating the dispute between the Brunswicks had dragged on for three years. He declared that he “abhors the existence of a segregated society,” but admitted that the state's effort to foster racial integration had failed and that mandating consolidation and busing could not bridge the chasm dividing the Brunswicks. Burke accepted North Brunswick's claim that New Brunswick High had been plagued by trouble and overcrowding. In an effort to maintain some measure of racial integration, he ordered North Brunswick High to offer enrollment to upwards of two hundred New Brunswick students, if they volunteered to attend the suburban high school. He also denied the all-white community of Milltown permission to send its students to North Brunswick High, which would decrease New Brunswick High's white enrollment even further. Many residents of Milltown responded by withdrawing their children from New Brunswick High: only 18 percent of high school students from Milltown enrolled in New Brunswick High in the 1974–1975 school year. Despite the animosity between the Brunswicks, Burke urged the two districts to cooperate “to ameliorate the negative effects of racial segregation” and “to make a reality of their mutually espoused concern for racial harmony.”Footnote 112
The departure of seven hundred white students made New Brunswick High a majority-minority school: when classes began in fall 1974, 60 percent of New Brunswick High's students were black or Latino, and white parents increasingly opted to enroll their children in private schools or moved elsewhere. The high school's new demographics did not eliminate racial tensions, as violence broke out in October, resulting in injuries to ten students and three arrests for assault and weapons possession.Footnote 113 The 1974 mayoral campaign also stoked racial tension in New Brunswick throughout the fall. When Governor Byrne appointed Mayor Sheehan as New Jersey's commissioner of community affairs in 1973, Aldrage B. Cooper Jr., the city's first black commissioner, was appointed to fill her unexpired term.Footnote 114 Cooper ran for mayor in 1974, but lost a hotly contested campaign against attorney Richard Mulligan.Footnote 115 At the time, Cooper diplomatically declined to blame racism for the election's outcome; decades later, he acknowledged that some whites felt that the city government had been too conciliatory to blacks’ demands and disliked having a black mayor.Footnote 116 Some whites also vented their antagonism to Superintendent Durant, vandalizing his home and car in May 1975, defacing them with racist slurs, including “Get out nigger” and “The KKK was here.”Footnote 117 Shortly after the school year began in September, Durant abruptly resigned, accusing Mayor Mulligan of “harassment … political interference … and racism.” More than two-thirds of New Brunswick High's black students walked out of classes to protest Durant's departure.Footnote 118
Geographically adjacent, the Brunswicks had gone their separate ways. In the spring of 1976, the New Brunswick Board of Education withdrew its proposal to maintain a relationship between the New Brunswick and North Brunswick schools. Later that year, the state's Department of Education terminated the agreement that allowed some New Brunswick students to attend North Brunswick High. The department contended that New Brunswick, unlike many other cities, was not principally a victim of “white flight,” because whites remained a majority of the city's residents. Nonetheless, the schools had experienced white flight of a sort, as many white parents chose to pay tuition to send their children to private schools instead of New Brunswick High. Ultimately, the department frankly conceded that its effort to create racially integrated schools in the Brunswicks had proved “dramatically unsuccessful.”Footnote 119
The Brunswick Blues
In 1976, journalist and activist Gene Robinson summed up the past decade of New Brunswick's history in the Black Voice and diagnosed black residents as suffering from “a severe case of the ‘Brunswick Blues.’” The civil rights era had come and gone, and black people had not gained their rightful share of power. Al Cooper, the city's first black commissioner and mayor, was out of office. Neighborhood House, a center for black activism, had closed. Efforts to gain significant influence over the public schools and improve education for minority students had made little progress.Footnote 120
The struggle between New Brunswick and North Brunswick resulted not from a disembodied process of suburbanization, white flight, or deindustrialization, but from a contingent debate over the future of the communities and their schools. White residents of North Brunswick, eager to develop their rapidly growing suburb and troubled by racial conflict in New Brunswick High School, invoked local control to justify their determination to build their own high school and to sever their relationship with New Brunswick High. Black and Latino residents of New Brunswick initially sought to maintain integration but soon became supporters of community control in an effort to gain more influence over the public schools and improve education for minority students. School administrators and many white residents of New Brunswick, concerned about the future of the school system and their city, generally supported integration. Education officials in the state of New Jersey voiced emphatic support for school integration but proved unwilling to enforce it in the face of considerable political pressure from both white suburbanites and black city residents. Ironically, in the “era of integration,” in which both the state and federal governments ostensibly supported school integration, as did many New Brunswick residents and school administrators, New Brunswick High, formerly an integrated school, became majority-minority. As some residents had foreseen, white enrollment subsequently decreased until the school enrolled almost exclusively minority students, as it does today.Footnote 121 More than six decades after Brown and four decades after the battle of the Brunswicks, Molly Townes O'Brien's assessment is, unfortunately, apt: “America's schools remain substantially segregated and unequal.”Footnote 122