Bell v. School City of Gary, Indiana

213 F. Supp. 819, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9798
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedJanuary 29, 1963
DocketCiv. 3346
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 213 F. Supp. 819 (Bell v. School City of Gary, Indiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. School City of Gary, Indiana, 213 F. Supp. 819, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9798 (N.D. Ind. 1963).

Opinion

*820 BEAMER, District Judge.

This is a declaratory judgment action brought by approximately 100 minor Negro children, enrolled in the public schools in Gary, Indiana. The action is brought by and on behalf of the plaintiffs and all others who are similarly situated, against the School City of Gary, Gary, Indiana.

The plaintiffs present three principal questions which they ask the Court to determine:

1. Whether the defendant, by assigning plaintiffs and the other members of the class to certain schools, by creating attendance zones, by controlling transfers from school to school, by controlling assignments from elementary to secondary schools and by the pattern of building new schools and enlarging others, maintain the Gary schools as a racially segregated school system in violation of the plaintiffs constitutional rights.

2. Whether the defendant is discriminating against the plaintiffs and the class they represent by providing inferior facilities in all respects, including but not limited to overcrowded and larger classes and unequal recreational and extra curricular facilities in violation of their constitutional rights, and

3. Whether the plaintiffs and other members of the class have a constitutional right to attend racially integrated schools and the defendant has a constitutional duty to provide and maintain a racially integrated school system.

The evidence shows that Gary, Indiana is a rapidly growing industrial city located in the northwest portion of Indiana. Geographically it is shaped much like the capital letter “T”. Its north boundary line is the southern shore of Lake Michigan. The stem of the “T” extends approximately seven miles from near the shore of Lake Michigan to the southern boundary of the city and is approximately two miles wide. The crossbar of the “T” is approximately four miles wide and extends east and west a distance of approximately ten and one-half miles. Steel mills and other heavy industrial establishments are located primarily along the shore of the lake. The remainder of the territory is devoted to commercial and residential areas although some industry is located near the east and west portions of the crossbar of the “T”.

The population of Gary, according to the United States Census, in 1950 was 133,911 which included 39,326 Negroes. In 1960, the population was 178,320, of which 69,340 were Negroes, The student population in the public schools for the 1951-52 school year was 22,770, of which 8,406 or approximately 37% were Negroes. In the 1961-62 school year there were 43,090 students in the public school system and 23,055 or approximately 53% were Negroes.

In 1951, the Gary School City maintained 20 school buildings. In 1961, the number of buildings had increased to 40. Additional schools had either been completed or were in the process of completion at the time of the trial of this case.

In the school year 1961-62, 10,710 of the students enrolled in the Gary school system attended fourteen schools which were 100% white; 16,242 students attended twelve schools which were populated from 99 to 100 per cent by Negroes; 6,981 students attended five schools which were from 77 to 95 per cent Negroes ; 4,066 attended four schools which had a range from 13 to 37 per cent Negro; 5,465 attended five schools which had a Negro population from one to five per cent.

The schools in operation in the 1951-52 and 1961-62 school years, their total enrollment and percentage of Negro students are shown on the following chart.

*821 TABLE SHOWING COMPARISON OF NEGRO AND WHITE YOUTH ENROLLED * IN GARY PUBLIC SCHOOLS YEAR 1951 and YEAR 1961

1951 —1952 1961 —1962

Total Enroll-No. of Total Enroll-No. of

Schools ment Negroes % ment Negroes %

AETNA — — - 1,095 — -

AMBRIDGE 190 — - 350 — -

BANNEKER — — - 877 876 99.

BETHUNE — — - 1,011 1,001 99.01

BEVERIDGE 465 69 14.8 470 392 83.4

BRUNSWICK — — - 1,039 — —

CARVER 893 893 100 1,196 1,196 100

CHASE — — - 467 171 36.8

DOUGLASS — — - 1,051 1,050 99.9

DREW — — - 978 974 99.59

DUNBAR — — - 1,343 1,342 99.92

EDISON 1,339 — - 1,358 27 1.9

EMERSON 1,896 179 9.44 2,184 276 12.64

FRANKLIN 482 — — 756 — —

FROEBEL 2,260 1,266 56 2,109 2,004 95

GARNETT — — - 1,272 1,272 100

GLEN PARK 474 — — 293 — _

IVANHOE 108 — — 678 89 13.12

JEFFERSON 701 8 1.14 773 35 4.9

KUNY — — — 375 —

LINCOLN 754 744 98.67 1,418 1,413 99.64

LOCKE — — - 1,094 1,093 99.9

MARQUETTE — — — 707 _

MANN 2,115 — — 1,602 1 .99

MELTON — — — 701 _ ...

MILLER 212 — — 196 _ _

NOBEL — — — 626 _

NORTON — — — 1,660 1,466 88.31

PITTMAN SQUARE — — _ 507 — _

PULASKI 1,671 1,646 98.52 1,719 1,714 99.7

.PYLE — — — 868 836 96.3

.RILEY 313 __ 725 — —

.ROOSEVELT 3,676 3,676 100 3,202 3,200 99.00

TOLLESTON 1,698 74 4.3 1,898 1,455 76.65

VOHR ■-- — - 801 11 1.37

WALLACE 2,384 — — 2,726 _ _

WASHINGTON 344 30 8.72 676 162 23.96

WEBSTER — — — 547 _ _

WILLIAMS — — — 881 881 100

WIRT 795 — — 1,034 2 1.9

.SPECIAL SCHOOLS:

DUNELAND — — — 74 35 47.29

LUTHERAN CHURCH -- — 62 45 72.58

NORTON PARK — — — 45 34 77.3

TEENETTES — — - 9 2 2.2

TOTAL 22,770 8,406 S6.5 43,090 23,055 53.5

*822 The Negro population in Gary is concentrated in what is generally called the “Central District” which occupies roughly the south half of the cross-bar of the “T” from east to west and is bounded on the north by the Wabash Railroad and on the south by the city limits and the Little Calumet River. The expansion of the Negro population within the Gary city limits has been largely from east to west within the Central District. Approximately 70,000 Negroes including the 23,000 Negro school children live in this District which comprises about one-third of the area of the city.

Gary, which is a relatively new city having been organized in 1906, developed a rather unique school system commonly known as the Wirt System, so named after the superintendent of schools who was its architect. It was originally laid out in eight school districts and, as the school population demanded, one large school was built in each of the eight districts. Each of these schools handled the education of the public school population within its area, from kindergarten through high school.

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Bluebook (online)
213 F. Supp. 819, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-school-city-of-gary-indiana-innd-1963.