Cleveland School Families Protest Junior‑High Assignments
A group of Cleveland School parents appeared before the Norwood School Committee in June 1969 to protest the district’s newly adopted junior‑high redistricting plan — a plan that would send their children to the Washington Street Junior High School rather than the new junior‑high facility scheduled to open in the fall.
The parents argued that the redistricting lines, particularly the Nichols Street cut‑off, unfairly divided the Cleveland School neighborhood and placed their children at a disadvantage. They requested detailed enrollment figures for both junior‑high schools and asked the committee to reconsider the boundaries.
Committee members, however, reaffirmed that the redistricting plan would not be altered. The decision had been made months earlier after a lengthy review of enrollment projections, building capacities, and transportation patterns. The Cleveland School district, they explained, had been assigned to Washington Street based on space availability and long‑term planning needs.
The meeting grew more tense when member John J. Cavanaugh introduced a motion to delay previously approved work at the Winslow School until the committee could review a “complete picture” of the town’s school‑housing needs. His motion was defeated 4–1, with the majority arguing that delaying the project would disrupt construction schedules and create unnecessary uncertainty.
The redistricting debate reflected broader concerns in Norwood during the late 1960s, as the town grappled with rising enrollment, aging buildings, and shifting neighborhood populations. For the families involved, the issue was deeply personal — a matter of school identity, community cohesion, and the desire to give their children access to the newest facilities.
The Patriot Ledger, June 12, 1969 via Newspapers.com
Text and images may have been created, edited, colorized, or digitally restored using AI tools such as Microsoft Copilot or Google Gemini. All content is reviewed for accuracy and historical integrity before publication by the Norwood Historical Society
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