Inscription
In Brown v. Topeka (1954) and Brown II (1955) the U.S. Supreme Court ordered public schools nationwide to end racial segregation “with all deliberate speed.” Nashville failed to comply, resulting in the Kelley v. Board of Education case (1955) and the 1957 enactment of a grade-per-year plan starting at the first grade. In 1963, the Maxwell v. Davidson County (1960) case was merged with the Kelley case. In 1998, the court deemed the Metro school system to be desegregated.
Named for Davidson County Judge and former Edgefield mayor William A. Glenn (1805-1883), the two-story, brick Glenn School opened in 1904. On Sept. 9, 1957, three African American first grade students desegregated the school. An agitated, jeering mob of white segregationists jostled students and parents. Members of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) visited area parents, supporting those already enrolled and encouraging others to join them. The school was replaced in 1988.
Location
Sources
More markers in Davidson
Heaton's Station
Nashville-Davidson, TN
Heaton’s Station (also called Old Heaton Station, Eaton Station, and Heatonsburg) was founded by Amos Heaton after arriving here with...
Captain John Rains 1743-1834
Nashville-Davidson, TN
On Christmas Day 1779, John Rains led his family and livestock across the frozen Cumberland and settled in this vicinity.
Site Of First Store
Nashville-Davidson, TN
Lardner Clark, “Merchant and Ordinary Keeper,” came from Philadelphia, Penn. in the early 1780s with ten horses packed with goods to sell.
Nashville Plow Works
Nashville-Davidson, TN
Site of a farm implement factory operated by Messrs. Sharp and Hamilton, previous to the War Between the States.
BATTLE OF NASHVILLE Shy's Hill
Nashville-Davidson, TN
On this hill was fought the decisive encounter of the Battle of Nashville December 16, 1864.
