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In this episode of Talking Hoosier History, we explore how Crispus Attucks High School went from being excluded from the Indiana High School Athletics Association to being the first all-Black school to win a high school state basketball championship in the nation. Show Notes Documents / Primary Sources Indianapolis Public Schools, Meeting Minutes of the Board of School Commissioners, February 1926 – December 1926, page 113, accessed Indianapolis Public Library. Indianapolis Public Schools, Meeting Minutes of the Board of School Commissioners, May 1925 – January 1926, page 84, accessed Indianapolis Public Library. Indianapolis Public Schools, Meeting Minutes of the Board of School Commissioners, November 14, 1922 – September 11, 1923, page 29, accessed Indianapolis Public Library. Indianapolis Public Schools, Meeting Minutes of the Board of School Commissioners, November 14, 1922 – September 11, 1923, accessed Indianapolis Public Library. “’Spite Fence’ Ruled Illegal,” Indianapolis Star, April 29, 1921, 5, newspapers.com. The Indiana High School Athletic Association Annual Handbook, 1926. Webpages Paul Mullins, “Racist Spite and Residential Segregation: Housing and the Color Line in Inter-War Indianapolis,” Archaeology and Material Culture. “Examining the Cross-Roads: School Segregation in Indiana,” Center for Evaluation, Policy, & Research, Indiana University Bloomington. “Herod, Henry Louis and Elizabeth Frances,” Notable Kentucky African Americans Database. Kandice Sumner, “How America’s Public Schools Keep Kids in Poverty,” TedTalk. Articles Dennis Parker, “Segregation 2.0: America’s School-to-prison pipeline,” MSNBC, May 8, 2014. Patrick Cremin, “School Policing was Designed to Criminalize Black Students. We Must Follow Black Voices Calling for its Abolition,” Harvard Civil Rights – Civil Liberties Law Review. Dara Lind, “Why Having Police in Schools is a Problem,” Vox. “U.S. School Segregation in the 21st Century,” Washington Center for Equitable Growth. “Long-Term Effects of School Desegregation and School Quality,” National Bureau of Economic Research.