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.
CITATION STYLE
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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