David Cecelski chronicles one of the most sustained and successful
protests of the civil rights movement--the 1968-69 school boycott in
Hyde County, North Carolina. For an entire year, the county's black
citizens refused to send their children to school in protest of a
desegregation plan that required closing two historically black schools
in their remote coastal community. Parents and students held nonviolent
protests daily for five months, marched twice on the state capitol in
Raleigh, and drove the Ku Klux Klan out of the county in a massive
gunfight.
The threatened closing of Hyde County's black schools collided with a
rich and vibrant educational heritage that had helped to sustain the
black community since Reconstruction. As other southern school boards
routinely closed black schools and displaced their educational leaders,
Hyde County blacks began to fear that school desegregation was
undermining--rather than enhancing--this legacy. This book, then, is the
story of one county's extraordinary struggle for civil rights, but at
the same time it explores the fight for civil rights in all of eastern
North Carolina and the dismantling of black education throughout the
South.