TLH 200: Tallahassee closed the pools to keep civil rights activists quiet. It didn’t work

After integration, many cities in the South decided to just shut pools down rather than let Black people in, including Tallahassee.

During the summers of 1964-1967, the city commission closed public swimming pools to avoid integrating them, according to Democrat archives.

The original Robinson-Trueblood Swimming Pool on Dade Street was dedicated May 18, 1953. Along with pools at Myers and Levy parks, Robinson-Trueblood was one of the first three pools built by the city, all in 1953.

The only pool Black residents could swim in was the Robinson-Trueblood pool.

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“In the twilight of segregation, Tallahassee fathers built a city swimming pool for Black residents and hoped it would quiet their increasing demands for integration,” wrote Tallahassee Democrat writer Gerald Ensley in 2001. “It didn’t work.”

Wade-ins, where African Americans would enter whites-only beaches and pools, were met with resistance and violence from Tallahassee’s segregationists and law enforcement.

FAMU student Patricia Stephens Due , a notable civil rights activist in Tallahassee during the Jim Crow era, watched her sister Priscilla get kicked in the stomach by a police officer at a wade-in at a white’s only public pool.

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