“In this comprehensive study of a neighborhood school in New Orleans, authors Schaffer, White, and Viator take the reader from the Jim Crow South to the 21st century while reflecting on profound social and economic changes that affected the city over an 80-year span. The book details how William Frantz Public School, built upon a segregated foundation, grabbed the nation’s attention as a battleground of school desegregation. Ruby Bridges’ story became a familiar chapter in the Civil Rights Movement; however, the school and the community it served suffered greatly from lack of support, and William Frantz Public School again became a symbol of inequality of the American education system. In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, changes in the city’s education system brought new challenges to the school.The authors’ incredible in-depth research weaves the stories of William Frantz Public School into an easy-to-understand narrative that builds upon scholarship surrounding education, segregation and desegregation, the Civil Rights Movement in New Orleans, and Hurricane Katrina. William Frantz Public School is a fascinating story of what one school would have to say about race, class, and education in America.”—Phillip Cunningham, Head of Research Services, Amistad Research Center, New Orleans, LA