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  • The Bergen Record

    Teaneck marks 60th anniversary of school integration with unveiling of marker, ceremony

    By Marsha A. Stoltz, NorthJersey.com,

    7 hours ago

    TEANECK — The unveiling of a marker at Bryant Elementary School will honor the 60th anniversary of the township's historic voluntary integration of its school district, the first to do so in the nation.

    The 6 p.m. ceremony on Sept. 18, at the school is the joint effort of the township's Board of Education and the Historic Preservation Commission.

    "This milestone highlights the district's enduring commitment to inclusivity, cultural enrichment, and academic excellence," said School Superintendent Andre Spencer. "As Teaneck Schools commemorate six decades of progress, we continue to advance programs that support diverse learning needs and promote a community where every student can excel."

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=08lGOd_0vRhJPtC00

    Despite the U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 Brown vs Board of Education ruling that state-sanctioned segregation of public schools was a violation of the 14th Amendment and was therefore unconstitutional, the practice was still widely in use 10 years later.

    Local activists, including Theodora and Archie Lacey and June Handler became concerned as the elementary school that housed grades kindergarten through fifth grade was losing its racial balance and approached the district with a plan to make the building the sixth-grade school for the entire township. In return, students in other grades would have to be bussed to other schools in the district.

    The plan was not without its critics. Black and white families argued in favor of neighborhood schools to minimize bussing, if not the unstated reason of preserving racially separate schools. However, the district's Board of Education voted in May 1964 to create the centralized sixth-grade building. The first integrated class entered Bryant School that September.

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    In 1965, another debate about integration surfaced, but resulted in the election of school board members who affirmed the busing plan and the central sixth grade. Former New Jersey Sen. Loretta Weinberg said her political career got its start while working as a volunteer on the campaign.

    “To me, there was sort of an importance to acknowledge that the responsibility to make sure our schools were properly integrated really fell on all of our families,” Weinberg said.

    SCHOOL RENAMED FOR ACTIVIST Teaneck school renamed for civil rights activist, 'living legend' Theodora Smiley Lacey

    The long-term effect of the plan is still being debated. The building is now used for pre-kindergarten classes. While the township is comprised of 40% Jewish residents, its public school enrollment is 15% white students and 61% Hispanic and Black. School controversy continues, including debate over last November's controversial high school student pro-Palestinian walk-out.

    The Sept. 18, 6 p.m. ceremony will be held at the school at 1 E. Tryon Ave. Speakers will include Theodora Lacey and Allison Davis, a member of the first sixth-grade class

    This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: Teaneck marks 60th anniversary of school integration with unveiling of marker, ceremony

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