Practice of holding separate school proms for white and black students
A segregated prom refers to the practice of United States high schools, generally located in the Deep South, of holding racially segregatedproms for white and black students. The practice spread after these schools were integrated, and persists in a few rural places to the present day. The separate proms have been the subject of frequent (often negative) press coverage, and several films.
History
Prior to the 1954 decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Brown v. Board of Education, most schools in the southern United States were racially segregated.[1] The process of integration of schools was slow, and many schools did not become integrated until the late 1960s and early 1970s. In order to avoid having to hold an integrated prom, many high schools stopped sponsoring any prom, and private segregated proms were organized as a replacement.[2][3][4][5][6] Sometimes a concern over interracial dating was cited as the reason for not holding a single prom.[5] Other schools cited liability concerns as the reason for not sponsoring a prom.[7]
In addition to segregated proms, some schools have also elected black and white homecoming kings and queens, class officers, and even awarded separate black and white superlatives such as "Most Likely To Succeed."[3][6][8] School sponsored separate events, including separate homecoming queens or superlatives, have been deemed to violate federal law by the United States Department of Justice.[9]
In two places in Georgia, the "black prom" was open to attendance by all students. Only the "white prom" was racially exclusive.[4][5]
School alumni at schools which held segregated proms sometimes hold segregated class reunions as well.[18]
Outside the Deep South
Even prior to integration in the South, there have been instances of segregated proms being held in integrated schools in the northern United States. In the late 1920s, for example, separate proms for blacks and whites are recorded as occurring at Froebel High School in Gary, Indiana.[19]
Notable cases
Charleston, Mississippi: In 1997, actor Morgan Freeman offered to fund a racially integrated prom in Charleston, Mississippi, where he lives. The offer was turned down. In 2007, he made the offer again and it was accepted, and the school held its first integrated prom in 2008, profiled in the documentary Prom Night in Mississippi.[15]
Taylor County, Georgia: In 2002, Taylor County, Georgia made international news for holding its first integrated prom, and again when a group of white students held a separate prom the following year.[3][5][20] The 2006 film For One Night is based on these events.
Toombs County, Georgia: In 2004, it was reported that Hispanic students at Toombs County High School had planned their own prom, and that separate white, black, and Hispanic proms would be held. The school, 56% white, 31% black, and 12% Hispanic, had been holding separate white and black proms since 1971.[21][22][23]
Hulond Humphries, former principal in Randolph County, Alabama who threatened to cancel the school prom in the mid-1990s to prevent attendance by interracial couples.
^ abMcIntosh, Barbara (May 2, 1988). "The Class That Crossed the Great Divide; In Arkansas, a High School's First Integrated Prom". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on November 8, 2012. Retrieved March 23, 2010.(reporting on first integrated prom in Forrest City, Arkansas, and noting "This Mississippi River Delta town, like many other Southern communities, had eliminated school-sponsored dances and other social functions when court-ordered integration began in the mid-1960s. For 23 years private, racially segregated dances sponsored by social clubs and individual families had taken the place of a traditional prom in Forrest City.")
^ abcdMark Walsh (May 14, 2003). "In Some Southern Towns, Prom Night a Black-or-White Affair". Education Week. Retrieved March 17, 2010.("... the 1970s. That is when many Southern schools were belatedly integrated, and the time when a new set of traditions was born. While black and white students now sat side by side in classrooms and on the school bus, the races would still often gather separately when it came time for the biggest dance of the year.")
^ abcdSara Corbett (May 21, 2009). "A Prom Divided". The New York Times. Retrieved March 17, 2010.
^ abcdElliott Minor (May 2, 2003). "Some Taylor County Students Are Reviving Segregated Prom". Rome News-Tribune. Associated Press. Retrieved March 17, 2010. ("After integration in the early 1970s, school officials stopped sponsoring a prom, in part because of fear of interracial dating.")
^ ab"Segregated prom a sure sign of spring for Alabama town". Star-News. Associated Press. May 6, 1990. Archived from the original on January 24, 2013. Retrieved March 17, 2010. (reported on segregated proms at Eufaula High School in Alabama, noting that "opponents of segregated proms claim the white-controlled school board uses worries over liquor and liability to dodge the issue of mixed-race dances")
^Greg Bluestein (April 22, 2007). "Ga. School Throws First Integrated Prom". The Washington Post. Associated Press. Retrieved March 23, 2010.(reporting on first integrated prom in Turner County, Georgia, also noting that "Aniesha Gipson, who became the county's first solo homecoming queen last fall as it abandoned the practice of crowning separate white and black queens.")
^Caroline Hendrie (October 13, 2004). "U.S. Warns Schools on Racially Separate Activities". Education Week. Retrieved March 23, 2010.("Practices such as holding segregated high school proms or naming separate race-based sets of recipients for senior-year honors 'are inconsistent with federal law and should not be tolerated,' says the joint letter from the civil rights offices of the federal departments of Justice and Education.' We have found, for example, that some school districts have racially separate homecoming queens and kings, most popular student, most friendly, as well as other superlatives,' says the letter. 'We have also found that school districts have assisted in facilitating racially separate proms.'")
^Jeffrey Scott Shapiro (May 19, 2003). "What segregated proms convey". Sarasota Herald-Tribune (reprinted from Los Angeles Times). Retrieved March 17, 2010.("Segregated proms, although apparently few, are one of the worst public displays of racism in today's America.")
^Rogers, Patrick (May 19, 2003). "Black and White Proms". People. Retrieved March 23, 2010.(reporting on segregated prom in Johnson County, Georgia, and noting "Though no national figures exist, Johnson is not the only county in the U.S. to host segregated proms.")