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Today In Black History: The Fight for School Desegregation in a New Jersey City

Hundreds of people occupied city hall chambers in Englewood, N.J., in protest of the school board’s refusal to transfer nine Black students to a new school.

Photo: Getty Images Getty

Hundreds piled into the City Hall chamber to witness the Englewood Board of Education budget meeting on Feb. 1, 1962, anxious to hear a committee report on school segregation in Englewood, New Jersey.

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Nine Black students were attempting to transfer to the new predominantly white Donald A. Quarles School from two mostly Black elementary schools, Lincoln School and Liberty School. The transfer requests were shot down.

Segregation was technically illegal statewide for more than a decade.

During that eveningโ€™s budget meeting, the council doubled down on the decision to deny the transfers, according to the New York Times, citing district lines. Some accused the city of continuously redrawing district lines to continue segregation and keep Black students in the poorer school districts. Sound familiar?ย 

To protest, Black and white demonstrators part of the Congress of Racial Equality (C.O.R.E., which you can read more about here) spent the night occupying the chamber.

โ€œStamping their feet and chanting โ€˜freedomโ€™ and โ€˜discrimination,โ€™ the demonstrators pledged that they would remain in the building all night and challenged the police to remove them,โ€ one article read.

Mayor Austin Volk allowed the demonstration to take place and stayed the night in his office, police surrounded the building just waiting for the word.

On Feb. 2, the Times reports that 15 people were arrested the morning after the all-night sit in. 11 of them for refusing to leave the council chamber and the other four โ€œsympathizersโ€ who showed support for them in their court arraignment that afternoon.

The charges were later dismissed, but protests against the decision continued for weeks on end. Paul Zuber, a well known civil rights attorney, filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of the nine students and their families that summer.

The fight for desegregation in New Jersey schools would continue for years, arguably decades, and it still hasnโ€™t ended with lawsuits filed as recently as 2018.

Check out the slideshow.

Englewood, NJ: Protest segregated schools

Englewood, NJ: Protest segregated schools: Pickets in front of the Municipal Building here February 2nd, to protest the arrest of 11 persons during sit-in demonstrations protesting allegedly segregated school. The sit-in took place Feb.1 and Feb 2. at City Hall in protest to a Board of education ruling barring nine Negro children from predominantly white Quarles School Feb 1., because of a zoning restriction. Photo: Getty Images Getty

City Hall in Englewood, New Jersey

Pickets march in front of City Hall in Englewood, New Jersey on Feb. 7, 1962 during meeting of City Council at which this yearโ€™s school budget was adopted. African American leadership in the community is protesting what it claims is segregation in the elementary school system. Photo: AP AP Photo

Englewood, NJ: Penelope Patch

9/6/1962-Englewood, NJ: Penelope Patch, 18, of Englewood, NJ (with sign at end of line of children) who spent 5 days in Albany, jail for desegregation activities. Photo: Getty Images Getty

Demonstration in Englewoodโ€™s McKay Park

Demonstrator John Patler, carrying sign, is surrounded after his arrest by Englewood, N.J., police during anti-segregation demonstration in Englewoodโ€™s McKay Park on August 18, 1962. Patler was one of the several demonstrators from right-wing group calling itself the American National Party. Patlerโ€™s was the only arrest during the rally. Photo: AP AP Photo

Picketers at Lincoln Elementary School

General view of picketers at Lincoln Elementary School in Englewood, New Jersey. Photo: Getty Images Getty

Who Was Arrested?

Screenshot from NYT article COURT ACQUITS 11 IN JERSEY SIT-IN; 4 Others Fined $25 Each in Englewood School Case Transfers Barred written by John W. Slocum, in print Feb. 17, 1962. Screenshot: Rachel Pilgrim
Screenshot from NYT article COURT ACQUITS 11 IN JERSEY SIT-IN; 4 Others Fined $25 Each in Englewood School Case Transfers Barred written by John W. Slocum, in print Feb. 17, 1962. Screenshot: Rachel Pilgrim
Screenshot from NYT article COURT ACQUITS 11 IN JERSEY SIT-IN; 4 Others Fined $25 Each in Englewood School Case Transfers Barred written by John W. Slocum, in print Feb. 17, 1962. Screenshot: Rachel Pilgrim

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