In 1958, Boone accepted his first teaching and coaching position at the Luther H. Foster High School in
Blackstone, Virginia, where he coached football, basketball and baseball. His teams recorded twenty-six wins, six losses and three district championships. In 1961, Boone returned to his home state of North Carolina to continue his coaching and teaching career. He accepted an assistant coach position at E.J. Hayes High School in
Williamston, North Carolina. His football teams amassed a record of 99 wins and 8 losses in a nine-year period. The 1966 football team was recognized by Scholastic Coach's Magazine as "The Number One Football Team in America". In 1969, Boone resigned from his position, having been informed by the Williamston school board that the town of Williamston "was not ready for a black head coach". Having fully integrated its high schools in 1965 (the elementary schools began City school integration on February 10, 1959), the city of
Alexandria, Virginia, consolidated students from three high schools into T. C. Williams in 1971, and Boone was named the head coach of the combined team. Boone took the team on a preseason training trip to
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, where the team members got to know each other, and President
Richard Nixon sent an aide, Dr. Brown, to see this integrated football team that was beginning to catch national attention. In December 1971, Nixon was quoted as saying of the Titans that "the team saved the city of Alexandria". Boone was fired from his coaching position in 1979, after allegations of player abuse and related complaints by three assistant coaches. He subsequently retired from coaching and appeared as a public speaker at functions regarding his time as coach. In 2016, he was awarded the Living Legends of Alexandria award given to notable citizens of Alexandria, Virginia. ==Personal life==