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						| Back | Dwight D 
						Eisenhower's Situation In Little Rock Speech Washington, D.C., September 
						24, 1957
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				| For a few minutes this evening I want to speak to you about the 
				serious situation that has arisen in Little Rock. To make this 
				talk I have come to the president's office in the White House. I 
				could have spoken from Rhode Island, where I have been staying 
				recently, but I felt that, in speaking from the house of 
				Lincoln, of Jackson and of Wilson, my words would better convey 
				both the sadness I feel in the action I was compelled today to 
				take and the firmness with which I intend to pursue this course 
				until the orders of the federal court at Little Rock can be 
				executed without unlawful interference. 
 In that city, under the leadership of demagogic extremists, 
				disorderly mobs have deliberately prevented the carrying out of 
				proper orders from a federal court. Local authorities have not 
				eliminated that violent opposition and, under the law, I 
				yesterday issued a proclamation calling upon the mob to 
				disperse.
 
 This morning the mob again gathered in front of the Central High 
				School of Little Rock, obviously for the purpose of again 
				preventing the carrying out of the Court's order relating to the 
				admission of Negro children to that school.
 
 Whenever normal agencies prove inadequate to the task and it 
				becomes necessary for the executive branch of the federal 
				government to use its powers and authority to uphold federal 
				courts, the president's responsibility is inescapable.
 
 In accordance with that responsibility, I have today issued an 
				Executive Order directing the use of troops under federal 
				authority to aid in the execution of federal law at Little Rock, 
				Arkansas. This became necessary when my proclamation of 
				yesterday was not observed, and the obstruction of justice still 
				continues.
 
 It is important that the reasons for my action be understood by 
				all our citizens.
 
 As you know, the Supreme Court of the United States has decided 
				that separate public educational facilities for the races are 
				inherently unequal and therefore compulsory school segregation 
				laws are unconstitutional.
 
 Our personal opinions about the decision have no bearing on the 
				matter of enforcement; the responsibility and authority of the 
				Supreme Court to interpret the Constitution are very clear. 
				Local federal courts were instructed by the Supreme Court to 
				issue such orders and decrees as might be necessary to achieve 
				admission to public schools without regard to race-and with all 
				deliberate speed.
 
 During the past several years, many communities in our Southern 
				states have instituted public school plans for gradual progress 
				in the enrollment and attendance of school children of all races 
				in order to bring themselves into compliance with the law of the 
				land.
 
 They thus demonstrated to the world that we are a nation in 
				which laws, not men, are supreme.
 
 I regret to say that this truth-the corner stone of our 
				liberties-was not observed in this instance.
 
 It was my hope that this localized situation would be brought 
				under control by city and state authorities. If the use of local 
				police powers had been sufficient, our traditional method of 
				leaving the problems in those hands would have been pursued. But 
				when large gatherings of obstructionists made it impossible for 
				the decrees of the court to be carried out, both the law and the 
				national interest demanded that the president take action.
 
 Here is the sequence of events in the development of the Little 
				Rock school case.
 
 In May of 1955, the Little Rock School Board approved a moderate 
				plan for the gradual desegregation of the public schools in that 
				city. It provided that a start toward integration would be made 
				at the present term in the high school, and that the plan would 
				be in full operation by 1963. Here I might say that in a number 
				of communities in Arkansas integration in the schools has 
				already started and without violence of any kind. Now this 
				Little Rock plan was challenged in the courts by some who 
				believed that the period of time as proposed in the plan was too 
				long.
 
 The United States Court at Little Rock, which has supervisory 
				responsibility under the law for the plan of desegregation in 
				the public schools, dismissed the challenge, thus approving a 
				gradual rather than an abrupt change from the existing system. 
				The court found that the school board had acted in good faith in 
				planning for a public school system free from racial 
				discrimination.
 
 Since that time, the court has on three separate occasions 
				issued orders directing that the plan be carried out. All 
				persons were instructed to refrain from interfering with the 
				efforts of the school board to comply with the law.
 
 Proper and sensible observance of the law then demanded the 
				respectful obedience which the nation has a right to expect from 
				all its people. This, unfortunately, has not been the case at 
				Little Rock. Certain misguided persons, many of them imported 
				into Little Rock by agitators, have insisted upon defying the 
				law and have sought to bring it into disrepute. The orders of 
				the court have thus been frustrated.
 
 The very basis of our individual rights and freedoms rests upon 
				the certainty that the president and the executive branch of 
				government will support and insure the carrying out of the 
				decisions of the federal courts, even, when necessary with all 
				the means at the president's command.
 
 Unless the president did so, anarchy would result.
 
 There would be no security for any except that which each one of 
				us could provide for himself.
 
 The interest of the nation in the proper fulfillment of the 
				law's requirements cannot yield to opposition and demonstrations 
				by some few persons.
 
 Mob rule cannot be allowed to override the decisions of our 
				courts.
 
 Now, let me make it very clear that federal troops are not being 
				used to relieve local and state authorities of their primary 
				duty to preserve the peace and order of the community. Nor are 
				the troops there for the purpose of taking over the 
				responsibility of the School Board and the other responsible 
				local officials in running Central High School. The running of 
				our school system and the maintenance of peace and order in each 
				of our states are strictly local affairs and the federal 
				government does not interfere except in a very few special cases 
				and when requested by one of the several states. In the present 
				case the troops are there, pursuant to law, solely for the 
				purpose of preventing interference with the orders of the court.
 
 The proper use of the powers of the executive branch to enforce 
				the orders of a federal court is limited to extraordinary and 
				compelling circumstances. Manifestly, such an extreme situation 
				has been created in Little Rock. This challenge must be met and 
				with such measures as will preserve to the people as a whole 
				their lawfully protected rights in a climate permitting their 
				free and fair exercise.
 
 The overwhelming majority of our people in every section of the 
				country are united in their respect for observance of the 
				law-even in those cases where they may disagree with that law.
 
 They deplore the call of extremists to violence.
 
 The decision of the Supreme Court concerning school integration, 
				of course, affects the South more seriously than it does other 
				sections of the country. In that region I have many warm 
				friends, some of them in the city of Little Rock. I have deemed 
				it a great personal privilege to spend in our southland tours of 
				duty while in the military service and enjoyable recreational 
				periods since that time.
 
 So from intimate personal knowledge, I know that the 
				overwhelming majority of the people in the South-including those 
				of Arkansas and of Little Rock-are of good will, united in their 
				efforts to preserve and respect the law even when they disagree 
				with it.
 
 They do not sympathize with mob rule. They, like the rest of our 
				nation, have proved in two great wars their readiness to 
				sacrifice for America.
 
 A foundation of our American way of life is our national respect 
				for law.
 
 In the South, as elsewhere, citizens are keenly aware of the 
				tremendous disservice that has been done to the people of 
				Arkansas in the eyes of the nation, and that has been done to 
				the nation in the eyes of the world.
 
 At a time when we face grave situations abroad because of the 
				hatred that communism bears toward a system of government based 
				on human rights, it would be difficult to exaggerate the harm 
				that is being done to the prestige and influence, and indeed to 
				the safety, of our nation and the world.
 
 Our enemies are gloating over this incident and using it 
				everywhere to misrepresent our whole nation. We are portrayed as 
				a violator of those standards of conduct which the peoples of 
				the world united to proclaim in the Charter of the United 
				Nations. There they affirmed "faith in fundamental human rights" 
				and "in the dignity and worth of the human person" and they did 
				so "without distinction as to race, sex, language or religion."
 
 And so, with deep confidence, I call upon the citizens of the 
				state of Arkansas to assist in bringing to an immediate end all 
				interference with the law and its processes. If resistance to 
				the federal court orders ceases at once, the further presence of 
				federal troops will be unnecessary and the city of Little Rock 
				will return to its normal habits of peace and order and a blot 
				upon the fair name and high honor of our nation in the world 
				will be removed.
 
 Thus will be restored the image of America and of all its parts 
				as one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.
 
 Good night, and thank you very much.
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