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Harold Washington and Chicago's Schools Between Civil Rights and the Decline of the New Deal Consensus, 1955–1987
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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An early break in Harold Washington's political career came via a 1955 speech he delivered on equality of educational opportunity. Leaders of Chicago's Roosevelt University invited the popular alumnus (Washington was the first African-American class president) to speak at the tenth anniversary of the school's founding. The young Assistant State's Attorney shared the platform with such notables as former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren, and newly elected Mayor Richard J. Daley. In his speech, Washington remembered the university as “an experience in democratic living.” He viewed equal educational opportunity as the school's “cornerstone” because its admissions policy relied on objective examinations. At Roosevelt, Washington found “at all levels… people reaching out to fill whatever gaps [less privileged students] may have had in their backgrounds, which might retard them in their efforts… to be more useful citizens in our greater democracy.” Daley loved the crowd-pleasing speech and began grooming Washington to become the next Cook County prosecutor. Washington's career path, however, led elsewhere.
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References
1 Washington began his political career through the tutelage and inspiration of his father, Roy Washington, one of the first Black politicians in Chicago to leave the Republican Party. Shortly after his father's death in 1953, Alderman Ralph Metcalfe installed Washington into his father's jobs as lawyer in Chicago's Corporation Counsel and as precinct captain in the Third Ward. NAACP Questionnaire, June 30, 1972, Illinois State Representative Records, 1969–1976, box 6, folder 19, HWP; Special Collections and Preservation Division, “Chicago Works Together: Neighborhood Development in the Washington Years, 1983–1987 (pamphlet, special collections, Chicago Public Library, 1996).Google Scholar
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27 For an overview of Catholic responses to the in-migration of African Americans and the out-migration of European Americans, see John McGreevy, Parish Boundaries: The Catholic Encounter with Race in the Urban North (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996). CTU Questionnaire; Fornero, George “The Expansion and Decline of Secondary Schools in the Archdiocese of Chicago, 1955–1980: A Historical Study,“ Journal of the Midwest History of Education Society 21 (1994): 108; Harris, Ron “Providence-St. Mel: The School that Refused to Die,” Ebony, December 1978; William Grimshaw telephone interview with author, January 29, 1997. For two years in elementary school, Washington attended St. Benedict the Moor, a boarding school in Milwaukee that served Black professionals. Washington disliked the regimentation (Travis, “Harold“, pp. 3–5), and it is doubtful that he supported parochial schools out of any belief in a Catholic school mystique.Google Scholar
28 The machine did not wield the same power by the late seventies. A pair of laws (the Shakman decrees) reduced patronage in municipal firing and hiring, and Black voters no longer delivered for machine candidates in the numbers they once did.Google Scholar
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43 Citizen Nominating Committee for Board of Education, Report for 1987 Nominating Round, p. 4, Education Subseries, box 30, folder 2, HWP.Google Scholar
44 After the 1979 financial crisis that triggered Superintendent Joseph Hannon's resignation, the school board appointed Angeline Caruso (white) acting superintendent, instead of her immediate superior, Redmond-promoted Deputy Superintendent Manford Byrd (Black). It had reached a point in Black Chicago, in which the appointment of a Black superintendent became a key demand, and in 1981 Byrne's board hired Love. Nevertheless, many in Chicago's Black community supported Byrd in 1979 and 1981, while others supported erstwhile CPS administrator Barbara Sizemore, who had become superintendent of the Washington, D.C. schools. Black interview; Kleppner, Chicago Divided, 59–61; Kantowicz, Kyle and Kids First, 32–37; Weele, Maribeth Vander Reclaiming Our Schools (Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1994), 160.Google Scholar
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