Texas Ranger in Mansfield

Dublin Core

Title

Texas Ranger in Mansfield

Subject

The Texas Rangers were deployed to Mansfield.

Description

Governor Allan Shivers ordered Texas Rangers to be dispatched in an effort to maintain order at the school as segregationists gathered to protest the federal court order to integrate students in 1956. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) viewed the use of the Texas Rangers as an attempt to maintain segregation. Leaders of the NAACP saw the governor’s actions as contrary to the Supreme Court order. Governor Shivers blamed the problem at Mansfield on the NAACP and commented that “the paid agitators ought to be put in jail” (see footnote). The back and forth exchanges between both sides indicated the divisive nature of the integration issue as Mansfield became a battleground that challenged the “separate but equal” law when the NAACP filed Jackson v. Rawdon on October 7, 1955.

Bibliography: Robyn Duff Ladino, Desegregating Texas Schools: Eisenhower, Shivers, and the Crisis at Mansfield High (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1996), 117-118.

Source

Texas State Library and Archives Commission

Publisher

[no text]

Date

1956

Files

Rangers with white locals.jpg

Citation

“Texas Ranger in Mansfield,” The Crisis at Mansfield, accessed April 26, 2024, https://mansfieldcrisis.omeka.net/items/show/216.