Image
Description
On September 12, 1867, 12-year-old Susan Clark was denied admission to Muscatine's Second Ward Common School Number 2 because she was African American. Her father, Alexander Clark, a determined businessman of Muscatine, acted to resist racism and the segregation of Iowa’s schools. Clark initiated an Iowa Supreme Court case to allow his daughter to attend the white-only public school. The Iowa Supreme Court affirmed the district court's decision that children of color could not be refused admission to Iowa's district schools.
Source-Dependent Questions
- What did the Iowa Supreme Court rule in Clark v. the Board of Directors?
- What were the similarities and differences of the Clark family’s experience in Muscatine, Iowa, in 1867 to other stories that you’ve studied?
Citation Information
- Image: Robin, Augustus, Portrait of Alexander Clark: Engraving, New York: Date unknown.
- Document: Silag, Bill, Bridgford, Susan Koch & Hal Chase, Outside In: African-American History in Iowa, pg. 72-73, 2001. Courtesy of State Historical Society of Iowa