Difference between revisions of "Women's Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools"

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The '''Women's Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools''' (WEC) was founded in the wake of the closure of public high schools schools during the [[Little Rock Crisis]]. The leader of the WEC was [[Adolphine Fletcher Terry]]. The group met for the first time in September 1858. In attendance at the first meeting were Terry, [[Vivion Brewer]], [[Velma Powell]], and fifty-five concerned women. Eventually the organization would swell to sixteen hundred members united for public education in the city. The tag line on group posters read "Not for Integration - Not for Segregation - But for Public Education."
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The '''Women's Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools''' (WEC) was founded in the wake of the closure of public high schools schools during the [[Little Rock Crisis]]. The leader of the WEC was [[Adolphine Fletcher Terry]].  
  
For five years the WEC battled the gubernatorial leadership of [[Orval Faubus]], at one point successfully recalling three of his supporters on the [[Little Rock School Board]]. The WEC also defeated proposed [[Amendment 52]] which would have ended the state's de facto responsibility for free public education.
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The WEC met for the first time in September 1858. In attendance at the first meeting were Terry, [[Vivion Brewer]], [[Velma Powell]], and fifty-five concerned women. Eventually the organization would swell to sixteen hundred members united for public education in the city. The tag line on group posters read "Not for Integration - Not for Segregation - But for Public Education."
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For five years the WEC battled the gubernatorial leadership of [[Orval Faubus]], at one point successfully recalling three of his supporters on the [[Little Rock School Board]]. The WEC also defeated proposed [[Amendment 52]] which would have ended the state's de facto responsibility for free public education. At its height the organization had fifteen hundred members. The WEC disbanded in 1963.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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*Sarah Alderman Murphy, ''Breaking the Silence: Little Rock's Women's Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools, 1958-1963'' (Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1997).
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Revision as of 18:25, 31 August 2008

The Women's Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools (WEC) was founded in the wake of the closure of public high schools schools during the Little Rock Crisis. The leader of the WEC was Adolphine Fletcher Terry.

The WEC met for the first time in September 1858. In attendance at the first meeting were Terry, Vivion Brewer, Velma Powell, and fifty-five concerned women. Eventually the organization would swell to sixteen hundred members united for public education in the city. The tag line on group posters read "Not for Integration - Not for Segregation - But for Public Education."

For five years the WEC battled the gubernatorial leadership of Orval Faubus, at one point successfully recalling three of his supporters on the Little Rock School Board. The WEC also defeated proposed Amendment 52 which would have ended the state's de facto responsibility for free public education. At its height the organization had fifteen hundred members. The WEC disbanded in 1963.

References

  • Sarah Alderman Murphy, Breaking the Silence: Little Rock's Women's Emergency Committee to Open Our Schools, 1958-1963 (Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, 1997).

External links