Students outside of Freedom School during 1964 Stay Out.
Students, parents and teachers on the steps of the St. Marks Freedom School on February 26, 1964.
On a wintry morning in 1964, Hubert “Hubie” Jones stood outside bundled in a peacoat, gloves and a fedora, with his toddler son in his arms. Next to him was a school bus with a large banner reading “Newtonites Support Freedom Stayout” in all caps pasted on its side.
The bus was one of a hoard of others that transported white suburban students into Boston where they spent the day learning alongside Black children in 35 Freedom Schools hosted in churches and community centers across Boston.
Long before busing began in the summer of 1974, Black Bostonians had been calling for changes to the education system. They argued that white students received quality education while Black children were saddled with underfunded, dilapidated schools — evidence of “de facto” segregation, or segregation not by law.
So, on that day, February 26, students ditched their regular schools to participate in these temporary, experimental integrated schools during a city-wide Freedom Stay Out led by activists James “Jim” Breeden and Noel Day.
“The Black community was engaged in a fierce battle,” said Jones, 90,
who decided to lead a “public purpose life,” when he moved to the
Boston area for college. Joining the Stay Out was one way he fulfilled
his commitment.
Jones,
now a social worker, had been asked to organize the suburban
communities in cities like Newton and to drum up support for the
movement among white parents and their children. That morning, as he
stood outside the bus in Newton, he saw the white students out.
The
Stay Out, Jones recalled, was “the Black leadership’s last-ditch
effort” to get the Boston School Committee to recognize and act on de
facto segregation, which it had continuously denied “because the
opposition to the interest” of Black people had “political currency.”
This
wasn’t the first time the Stay Out’s organizers had coordinated such a
movement. The year before, Breeden and Day, under the organization
Citizens for Human Rights, held an ad hoc Stay Out on June 18, 1963, for
the same reason. The boycott was much smaller in scale — about 3,000
students stayed home from school or attended Freedom Schools — but it
laid the groundwork for the larger 1964 Stay Out.
For
Peggy Dammond Preacely, Day’s former wife, who was in her early 20s at
the time, the kind of organizing required to execute the 1964 Stay Out
was familiar territory. She had been an accomplished public speaker,
community organizer, and an early Freedom Rider.
“I
think I was probably fired up from having been in the South, having
been in jail, having been very angry at America and how we as Black
people were being treated,” said Preacely, now 81. “But at the same
time, the organizing principles were not difficult for us, and that’s
why it was successful.”
The
Stay Out organizers — banded under the banner of an organization called
the Massachusetts Freedom Movement — leaned into the momentum of 1963,
energized by the Stay Out in June and the March on Washington in August.
Thanks
to their education as members of the Black middle class, their previous
experience with organizations such as the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, and the distribution of the Massachusetts Freedom
Movement’s newspaper “Freedom’s Journal,” the leaders reached people of
different ethnicities and ages.
To do this, they relied on interracial organizing.
Boston
has historically had a smaller Black population than other northern
cities, which was especially true during the Great Migration, said
Zebulon Vance Miletsky, associate professor of Africana Studies at Stony
Brook University and author of “Before Busing:
A History of Boston’s Long Black Freedom Struggle.”
The
Stay Out organizers recognized that Boston had too small a Black
population to effect change alone, so they called upon their white
allies, some of whom taught in the Freedom Schools.
“Black
leaders were not as successful in gaining elected office, but they were
successful [in] what we would call community organizing today,” said
Miletsky, who grew up in Boston and attended Boston Public Schools in
the 1980s and 1990s.
Breeden,
Day and their colleagues visited gathering spaces like community
centers and churches to get people involved. They also trained students
on how to talk to and recruit other students.
Black Bostonians were motivated after months of being told nothing was wrong with their schools.
“And
so it all kind of culminated in this expression of, ‘We’re not going to
take this anymore,’” said Alyssa Napier, an associate editor at
Columbia University Press and former doctoral student in the Harvard
University Graduate School of Education.
By
the numbers, the organizers’ efforts proved successful. That day 10,000
students attended Freedom Schools across Boston during the Freedom Stay
Out, a day that ended in a march to City Hall.
“It
was a demonstration that we were tired of raggedy … schools… —
overcrowded, old buildings, old books, no pencils,” said Jean McGuire, a
longtime activist who supervised some of the Freedom Schools that day.
Like
Preacely, McGuire, now in her 90s, was deeply involved in community
organizing, having founded the Black Educator’s Alliance of
Massachusetts, formerly the Massachusetts Negro Educator’s Association.
The Stay Out was just one part of her life of activism.
“It’s
just the way Black people live. Everything you do, every job you have,
even your marriages are involved with what it means to be ex-slaves,”
she said, adding that, “You’re always working towards freedom.”
Despite
the sheer scale of the Stay Out, the movement often falls into the
shadow of the busing crisis, a better-known chapter of Boston’s
desegregation history.
One reason for this, Napier said, is the media coverage.
Published
20 years after the 1964 Stay Out and during Boston’s busing crisis, J.
Anthony Lukas’ “Common Ground” became the definitive story of
desegregation, chronicling the busing crisis through the perspective of
three families.
Language may have played a role too.
Where
other cities like Chicago and New York called their movements
“boycotts,” Boston stuck with the less “scandalous” term of “Stay Out.”
News and other media clung to and sensationalized the violent reactions
to busing in a way that they couldn’t do with the peaceful Stay Outs,
rendering it less talked about.
Long overdue change
Even
after the success of the 1964 Stay Out, it was years before Boston’s
elected officials responded to the demands of Breeden, Day and their
colleagues, because “the Boston School Committee was full of people who
did not care about Black people — did not want to change,” Napier said.
Miletsky
agreed. Why the Boston School Committee was so resistant to change can
be explained by the dynamics of Boston’s population demographics.
At
the time, the city was comprised of a unique mix of ethnic and
immigrant groups. One of those groups, Irish Americans, held positions
on the Boston School Committee, having come into power in the late 19th
and 20th centuries.
They
had faced discrimination and prejudice in the face of anti-Catholic
sentiment in the nation in the late 19th century, Miletsky said, and
Boston was also home to the Brahmin, “the proper Bostonian” descended
from England, which increased tensions.
“In
other words, you have a very strange hierarchy, where, in some ways,
African Americans were, at least from the ruling class perspective, seen
as being sort of maybe a rung higher in some ways than the Irish
themselves,” Miletsky said.
As
such, Irish Americans in leadership positions, including those on the
School Committee, felt they were defending what was theirs. Because they
were unwilling to concede the power they had long been starved of, they
refused to acknowledge the requests of Black Bostonians.
When
the expected change stalled, Black leaders continued organizing soon
after the Stay Out. They founded independent schools, and they created
“Operation Exodus,” a busing program within Boston, and the Metropolitan
Council for
Educational Opportunity, or METCO, which still to this day transports
Boston students to suburban schools.
“There’s
something really, for me, inspiring about seeing what has been done in
the past and seeing how those legacies linger even today,” she said.
“People are still making Freedom Schools because that kind of impulse to
protect Black children through this very specific expression
reverberates throughout history.”
Preacely
said she is proud of the work she and other leaders did, adding that
the robust curriculum and empowerment contributed positively to the
city.
But she admitted
that much of their work was driven by an almost naive optimism based on
the changes happening around the world and in the South back then.
“We
felt that all we had to do is call attention to these wrongs…. We knew
that the world was not in a wonderful place, but we were still very
hopeful,” she said. “And we felt that [the Stay Out] would lead to
institutional change.”
Ten
years after the Stay Out, on June 21, 1974, Judge W. Arthur Garrity
ordered the desegregation of Boston’s schools against the backdrop of
mounting racial tensions. Where white people had previously been
supportive of integration in the form of the Stay Outs, the reaction to
busing was much more violent.
“When
talking about busing, or when talking about the history of education in
Boston, we’re specifically talking about white Bostonians feeling a
type of way, and then white suburbanites feeling differently,” Napier
said.
White
suburbanites saw the Stay Out as an opportunity for personal enrichment
and a way to participate in the Civil Rights Movement, but they were
still distant from the nucleus of the issue.
“White
suburbanites were all for supporting the problems that were happening
in the city because it wasn’t really their problem, yet,” Napier said,
adding that “white suburbanites support is not the same thing as white
Bostonians.”
When Jones and his fellow organizers began planning the Stay Out, they expected widespread transformation to follow.
“In
the 60s … we thought we were going to change the country. We thought we
were going to change this region. We thought we were on the way to
getting really serious change,” he said. “And ... come to find out there
were all kinds of ways that made that impossible.”
While
the Stay Out didn’t immediately lead to the change in the education
system they hoped for, Jones said he recognizes the positives that
proceeded — Operation Exodus, METCO, which his wife Catherine Jones was
involved in, and the Racial Imbalance Act of 1965, which declared that
school systems throughout the Commonwealth had to racially integrate
their schools.
Today,
the progress is more apparent. Jones pointed to the Boston City Council,
which is made up mostly of women and people of color. He didn’t think
he’d live to see that happen.
“At
the end of the day … it’s a marathon and anybody who wants to get
involved in this has to make a commitment for life,” he said. “It’s not:
in one day and out the next. It’s staying at this stuff for a long,
long time, and that’s what’s going to make change.”