E. J. Edmunds, School Integration, and White Supremacist Backlash in Reconstruction New Orleans

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Abstract

When the New Orleans school board appointed E. J. Edmunds, a light-skinned Afro-Creole man, the mathematics teacher for the city's best high school in 1875, the senior students walked out rather than have a negro as a teacher of white youths. Edmunds's appointment was a final, bold act by the city's mixed-race intellectual elite in exercising the political power they held under Radical Reconstruction to strip racial designations from public schools. White supremacist Redeemers responded with a vicious propaganda campaign to define, differentiate, and diminish the negro race. Edmunds navigated the shifting landscape of race in the New Orleans public schools first as a student and then as a teacher, and the details of his life show the impact on ordinary Afro-Creoles as the city's warring politicians used the public schools both to undermine and reinforce the racial order.

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Zelbo, S. (2019, August 1). E. J. Edmunds, School Integration, and White Supremacist Backlash in Reconstruction New Orleans. History of Education Quarterly. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/heq.2019.26

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