Cover Story
60 Years Ago Nine Students Crossed a Line

60 Years Ago Nine Students Crossed a Line
At 8:15 a.m. on February 10, 1959, a gray and misty morning 60 years ago, nine African American school children walked across a line of 58 police officers into the all-white Theodore Ficklin Elementary School. The children had been selected to be part of an NAACP lawsuit against Virginia school systems that were resisting integration. Their actions began a long slow process to desegregate Alexandria City Public Schools that would take another 14 years to complete.
Those African American children disappeared into the school system and only handful of the nine have spoken about that day.
One of the requirements put in place by the School Board and Superintendent of Schools just a few weeks earlier was that any African American children requesting a transfer should be above average intelligence. James and Margaret Lomax were both exceptionally bright children. Margaret, then 6, would become valedictorian when she graduated and her brother James, 8, achieved all As and Bs throughout his education.
Their mother Ella Lomax just wanted her children to have a safer and shorter walk to school. The whites-only Theodore Ficklin School was only a block from their house, while Charles Houston, the school for African Americans, was a mile away. Their father had fought for democracy in the U.S. Army and Mrs. Lomax felt that her children were entitled to their share of democracy too.
These first students to break the racial barrier in Alexandria did not have an easy time. They were pelted with spitballs, tripped in hallways, had books knocked out of their hands. Some received low grades they didn’t deserve.
“They suffered the stares of classmates and the racial slurs shouted from passing cars,” according to former Alexandria teacher Mable Lyles. And there were other, more serious consequences.
Originally 14 children had been selected for the Civil Rights case, but not all made it. Pearl and Theodosia Hundley’s mother, Blois, wanted them to learn a foreign language and felt that the Ficklin school offered better educational opportunities. She was at a PTA meeting at the all-black Parker-Gray School when parents were asked if anyone wanted to have their children attend the white schools and would join the NAACP lawsuit.
But the Hundley children weren’t able to join the nine because their mother, a cook at Lyles-Crouch Elementary School, was fired by Superintendent Thomas Chambliss Williams.
“We couldn’t very well continue to employ her after such a slap in the face. If we had continued, it would have been condoning her action. Her race had nothing to do with it. If she had been green it would have been the same thing,” Superintendent T.C. Williams told the Board.
Even though Mrs. Hundley was later reinstated, she pulled Pearl and Theodosia out of the school system and moved into Washington D.C.

Informative article.
Also good are black history tours of Alexandria, available through:
https://www.meetup.com/Washarea-Discovery-Hikes/