US Trends

when was the last segregated school

The last officially desegregated public school system widely recognized in the United States was in Cleveland, Mississippi, where the federal courts finally forced the consolidation of its historically white and Black high schools in 2016.

Quick Scoop: When Was the Last Segregated School?

In Cleveland, Mississippi, the school district had effectively run two separate secondary school systems for decades:

  • Cleveland High School, historically attended by white students
  • East Side High School, historically attended by Black students

Even after Brown v. Board of Education (1954) declared segregated public schools unconstitutional, this district remained divided along racial lines for roughly fifty years. A federal desegregation case first filed in 1965 dragged on through generations of students.

In May 2016, U.S. District Judge Debra Brown ruled that the district’s various half-measures were still unconstitutional and ordered the schools to be consolidated into a single high school and a single middle school serving all students. Under this order, Cleveland High and East Side High were merged into Cleveland Central High School, and East Side’s campus became Cleveland Central Middle School.

Because this change came so late and arose from a still‑active desegregation case dating back to the 1960s, Cleveland, Mississippi, is often described as the site of “the last segregated school district” or the last segregated public high schools dismantled by federal court order in the U.S.

Key Facts in Brief

  • Segregated public schools were ruled unconstitutional in 1954 (Brown v. Board), but many districts resisted or delayed for decades.
  • Cleveland, Mississippi’s desegregation case began in 1965 and was not fully resolved until 2016.
  • The district maintained a racially mixed “good” high school and a nearly all‑Black high school that was under‑resourced, effectively operating as two parallel systems.
  • A 2016 federal ruling forced consolidation into Cleveland Central High School and Cleveland Central Middle School, widely cited as the last dismantling of a segregated K–12 public school system by court order.

Today’s Reality: Segregation vs. “Resegregation”

While the last formally segregated public high schools were dismantled in 2016, many researchers argue that American schools have since experienced significant resegregation. They point to districts where schools are racially and economically isolated even without explicit “whites only” or “Blacks only” laws. This happens through factors like housing patterns, district zoning, and school choice systems that, in practice, separate students by race and income.

So, in legal terms, the last “segregated school” is usually associated with Cleveland, Mississippi in 2016. But in practical terms, high levels of racial and economic separation in schools are still a current policy and civil-rights issue, not just a closed chapter of history.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.