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Item Name
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East Nashville Magnet High School
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Creator
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Wes Dunbar
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Lede
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East Nashville Magnet played an integral part in bringing the Civil Rights movement to Middle Tennessee.
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Story-Subject
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East Nashville Magnet was built at the start of the New Deal in 1932 as part of a plan by Dr. Frank Bachman of George Peabody College. He recommended “three new white and one new black high schools” be built in the area. The striking art deco façade is marked by a clock over the central entrance. This was erected in 1946 as a memorial to the fifty-nine alumni of the school who died in World War II. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The school is most notable for the role it played in the Civil Rights movement. In 1955, the same year that Rosa Parks sparked the Montgomery Bus Boycott, a young African-American student named Robert Kelley, Jr. was denied entry to the school. Shortly thereafter, his parents, alongside others, filed a lawsuit against the Board. When they won their court case in 1956, the school board devised a plan to integrate schools using the so-called “Nashville Plan.” This plan is alternately known to history as the “grade-a-year-plan” wherein one grade every year would be integrated until the entire school system had been integrated. However, white residents militantly opposed integration. Surprisingly, it was a recent immigrant to the South, a New Jersey segregationist named John Kasper, who fostered anti-integration sentiment among whites. Kasper was a major figure during the struggle to integrate the Nashville schools, and he was later arrested in connection to a school bombing in Clinton, TN.
As historian Don Doyle has stated, the grade-a-year-plan was understood as “a deliberate program of gradual and token desegregation formulated by people who had no enthusiasm for integration." However Nashville’s plan differed from other southern places like Virginia where officials resisted integration laws altogether. Today, East Nashville Magnet students are predominately African American and take exclusively honors and AP classes here in college preparatory programs.
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Subtitle
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The School that Played a Role in the Civil Rights Movement
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Subject
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The role played by East Nashville Magnet in the Civil Rights movement.
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Source
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File #88: "East Nashville High School, Nashville, Tennessee, n.d."
Description - An exterior view of East Nashville High School, located at 110 Gallatin Road, in Nashville, Tennessee. The school was first opened to 1500 students in grades 9-12 in the Fall of 1932, in the midst of the “Great Depression.” Forms part of the Metro Archives Photographs - School Collection. 1 photograph.
Source Metropolitan Nashville/Davidson County Archives, Nashville Public Library
Date n.d.
Rights - U.S. and international copyright laws protect this digital content, which is provided for educational purposes only and may not be downloaded, reproduced, or distributed for any other purpose without written permission. Please contact the Metro Archives, Nashville Public Library, 615 Church Street, Nashville, Tennessee, 37219. Telephone (615) 862-5880.
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Related Resources
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Department of Education School Data. Accessed November 15, 2018. https://ocrdata.ed.gov/flex/Reports.aspx?type=school
Doyle, Don. Nashville Since the 1920’s. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1985.
National Parks Service. “East Nashville High and Junior High School.” National Register of Historic Places, October 1990. Accessed November 15, 2018. https://npgallery.nps.gov/nrhp/GetAsset?assetID=c2a06a32-4c38-4b95-b4b1-7145aed4e137
Shaw, Michelle E. “Restoration of East Schools is Labor of Love and History.” The Tennessean, March 24, 2003. Accessed November 15, 2018. https://search-proquest-com.ezproxy.mtsu.edu/tennessean/docview/239549024/fulltext/5C0E9F76462A4A60PQ/1?accountid=4886
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Bibliographic Citation
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Wes Dunbar, “East Nashville Magnet High School,” Bygone Nashville, accessed September 15, 2025, https://bygone-nashville.mtsu.edu/admin/items/show/34.
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Title/Location
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East Nashville Magnet High School
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Address
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110 Gallatin Ave, Nashville, TN 37206