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1974
- 1974: Directed by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, U.S. District Judge James Gordon orders the Louisville and Jefferson County school systems to desegregate. A plan for merging the two school systems is adopted.
www.courier-journal.com/story/news/education/2015/09/03/jcps-desegregation-timeline/71637432/
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When did Louisville annex the Jefferson County School District?
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for the merged Louisville-Jefferson County School District went into effect in 1975, a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2007 on desegregation plans in Louisville and Seattle once again focused attention on the Louisville-Jefferson County cases from the early 1970s. 1 was lead counsel for the plaintiffs in those
In 1912, the Louisville Public School District began annexing property in Jefferson County which had already been annexed by city government, bringing enrollment to 45,841 (33,831 white, 12,010 black) by the 1956 school year, the last year of segregated education in the public schools. In its final year as a separate school district, enrollment ...
Feb 12, 2022 · Prior to 1975, public schools in Louisville, Kentucky were separated into two districts: the Louisville school system and the Jefferson County school system. After the Supreme Court decision in Milliken v. Bradley in 1974, the Kentucky Board of Education merged the two districts into one, naming it the Jefferson County Public Schools System.
Key words: busing, Kentucky, Louisville, memory, school desegregation. In the spring of 2007, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments in Meredith v. Jefferson County Board of Education, a school desegregation case arising. from Louisville, Kentucky.
In 1975, the Jefferson County and Louisville school districts were merged by court order. The impetus for this decision was a lawsuit filed in 1971 regarding continued segregation in the schools. At that time the Louisville district’s school population was heavily African-American, while the Jefferson County district’s was primarily white.
Mar 27, 2015 · Ever since a court forced them to integrate in the 1970s, the city of Louisville and surrounding Jefferson County have tried to maintain diverse schools. Though the region fought the integration...