NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Jo Ann Allen Boyce, who as part of the ''Clinton 12'' helped integrate one of the first public schools in the South, died on Wednesday at her Los Angeles home. She was 84.
Her death was confirmed by her daughter, Kamlyn Young, who said her mother died from pancreatic cancer after living with it for a decade.
Clinton High School in Tennessee was integrated in 1956, a couple of years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Brown v Board of Education that separating public school children on the basis of race was unconstitutional and a year before Little Rock Central High School was desegregated by force. Unlike the Little Rock Nine, the Clinton 12 students were not picked by community leaders for the job of desegregation. They just happened to live within the Anderson County school district at the time.
As a 14-year-old sophomore, Boyce was excited about the opportunity to attend the formerly all-white high school. She previously had to walk past it to catch a bus that took her and other Black teenagers to a segregated high school in Knoxville, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) away.
''She was thinking about, ‘What clothes was I going to wear? How would I do my hair? Who were going to be my friends?''' daughter-in-law Libby Boyce said in a telephone interview on Thursday.
Although the court-ordered desegregation in Clinton was accepted by state and local authorities, many in the local white community were against it. They were soon joined by Ku Klux Klan members and segregationists from outside the community in a series of violent protests that led to the National Guard being called in to restore order.
In a television interview at the time, Boyce recounted that their first day of school, a Monday, was fairly calm, with a few onlookers who she thought might just be curious. The next day, there were more people gathered to watch the group of Black children walk to school, including a boy with a protest sign.
''On Wednesday morning, I almost cried to go back home because there were so many people, and they looked so mean,'' she said. ''They looked like they just wanted to grab us and throw us out. They didn't want us at all. I could just see the hate in their hearts.''