School segregation in the Jim Crow era Brown v. Board of Education is a landmark desegregation ruling, but difficult to implement, and limited to state-sanctioned segregation of public schools. One year later, in
Brown II, enforcement of this principle was given to district courts, ordering that they take the necessary steps to make admittance to public schools nondiscriminatory "with all deliberate speed." The term "all deliberate speed" did little to speed up the school board's plan for integration. Judge
John J. Parker of the
United States Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit led many in the
South in interpreting
Brown as a charge not to segregate, but not as an order to integrate. The Supreme Court heard several more cases surrounding the speed and efficacy of desegregation between its initial ruling in
Brown and the
Green v. School Board case in 1968.
Virginia Virginia had long mandated racial segregation in public education under the Virginia Constitution of 1902. The school board continued to operate a segregated system in the wake of the
Brown rulings, on the authority of several "
massive resistance" state laws enacted to resist them. One such law, the Pupil Placement Act, divested local boards of authority to assign children to particular schools and centralized that power with the newly created State Pupil Placement Board. Under the act, children were automatically reassigned to their prior school each year unless they applied for transfer to another school and the board approved their application. New students' schools were also assigned by the board. At the time of the 1960 census, in New Kent County, Virginia, approximately half of the 4,500 residents were African American. Since 1965 students had been bused to the school of their choice, but no white students had ever opted to attend the black school, and only 15% of black students chose to attend the white school. A few years later, with the support of the political branches, the Supreme Court held in
Green that broad remedies were needed to desegregate "root and branch". Every school district had an "affirmative duty" to achieve proportional racial enrollment for every public school in a "dual system" This was the end of "colorblind" freedom of choice plans, but in subsequent cases the Supreme Court made it more cumbersome to challenge racial inequality in schools that had never been segregated under
Jim Crow laws. ==Fourth Circuit==