In conjunction with itscultural presentation for BlackHistory Month, the President’sLeadership Council (PLC)sponsored a lecture by EthelTompkins, Hoxie native, onthe integration of the HoxieSchool in 1955. A total of 25African American studentsinitially entered the schoolsystem, but 21 of the studentsremained enrolled in the 1,000-student school. Tompkinswas one of the 21.
Retired from the Hoxielibrary, Tompkins devotes much of her time telling thestory of the “Hoxie 21” and the successful and mostlypeaceful integration of this northeast Arkansas schooldistrict. It is an integration that occurred two years beforethe much more widely known “Little Rock Nine” enteredLittle Rock’s Central High School with the National Guard called out to maintain thepeace and ensure the safety ofthe African American students.
Mrs. Tompkins explainedthat the opposition which surfaced at Hoxie was largely directed toward the local SchoolBoard, whose courage shepraised, while in Little Rock, the1957 desegregation becamehighly politicized.
The cultural presentation,held last week in the StudentLounge in the BRTC Administration, opened with a performance of “AmazingGrace” and “How Great Thou Art” by the KimbroughChoir, with soloists Rachel Koons and Emily Copeland,and a duet by Koons and Joniece Trammel, Choir Director.
Also highlighting the presentationwere selections from African American poets by English Club AdvisorLisa Inman and three members of theclub, Michael Secrest, Shelby Borst,and Jason Moseley. Moseley alsoserved as emcee for the presentation.
Pat Johnson, Chair of the EddieMae Herron Center, acknowledgedappreciation to BRTC for the college’s longstanding support of effortsto preserve and promote AfricanAmerican history and culture. BRTCPresident Dr. Wayne Hatcher expressed his appreciation to the PLCand others, and introduced Mrs. Tompkins.
Mrs. Tompkins told the audience that thenHoxie School Board member Howard Vance citedthree reasons for the unanimous vote by the SchoolBoard to integrate the year after the landmarkBrown v. the Board of Education of Topeka in1954, which ruled that the “separate but equal”provision from the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson case beoverturned. The reasons Vince gave were these: “It was right in the sight of God, it complied with theSupreme Court ruling, and it was cheaper for theschool system.” Tompkins explained that the Hoxiedistrict was financially responsible for providingcertain items for the education of the African American students. Even though the books were not newones and the building was substandard, withouteven water or restrooms, providing things like a busto transport the African American students to Booker T. Washington School in Jonesboro after they completed eighth grade in their oneroom Hoxie school still posed afinancial hardship on the Hoxieschool.
Though the integration was muchless troubled and heated than theLittle Rock experience, it was notentirely smooth, Mrs. Tompkinsnoted. LIFE Magazine recorded theevent; its coverage drew the attention of segregationists from otherareas. These individuals attemptedto thwart the integration with legalaction and threats to the SchoolBoard and others, but did not prevail.
It is Tompkins’ goal, she explained, to raiseawareness of this groundbreaking historical event.In fact, a monument on the grounds of the capitolis planned, so that people know not only about the“Little Rock Nine,” but also about the “Hoxie21.”She brought with her an exhibit of photos, articles,and a copy of that 1955 issue of LIFE Magazinethat was intended to showcase a “seamless process,” but inadvertently incited problems.

