Black History Month Pop-Up Exhibit: Public Education in Milwaukee, 1950-2025
UWM Archives’ new Black History Month pop-up exhibit highlights the more than half-century of organizing for integrated public schools in one of the most segregated cities in the United States.
The exhibit traces the fortunes of public education in Milwaukee from the early, militant organizing of Lloyd Barbee’s Milwaukee United School Integration Committee (MUSIC) through a stagnating desegregation program and flashpoints over school closings in the 1980s, to the rise of voucher schools and privatization since the 1990s. The exhibit also highlights how organizing to “Defend Democracy” and “Protect Our Public Schools” from takeovers since the 2010s sit within a longer activist vision of “Freedom and Independence” and “true equality of educational opportunities.”
📸: MUSIC calls on Milwaukee parents to “Keep Your Children Out of School” and send them to a Freedom Day School instead. Call Number: MUSIC Records, Milwaukee Mss 5.
📸: A “Freedom School Certificate” certifies that a student “took an active part in this historic battle for equal education and human dignity.” Call Number: MUSIC Records, Milwaukee Mss 5.
📸: A flier from Blacks for Two-Way Integration shows how organizers kept up the pressure even after the adoption of a formal desegregation plan, protesting that the burden of integration rested primarily on students and families of color. Agitating for integration that was “two-way or no-way,” students, families, and community organizations defended neighborhood schools, autonomy, and the freedom to choose for students and families of color. Call Number: Metropolitan Integration Research Center Records, UWM Mss 332.
Drawing on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, we also invite visitors to respond to the exhibit by sharing their hopes for the future of public education in Milwaukee.
Drop by anytime during library open hours in February, and be sure to visit other stellar Black History Month pop-up exhibits at UWM Special Collections and the American Geographical Society Library!














