Legendary Paterson Eastside High School principal Joe Clark dies at 82

dik cashmere

Freaky Tah gettin high that's my brother
BGOL Investor
Joe Clark, who became a legend as the baseball bat and bullhorn-wielding principal of Eastside High School in Paterson in the 1980s, died on Tuesday.
Clark was 82. He died at his home in Gainesville, Florida after a long battle with illness, according to his family. They did not specify the nature of the illness.
Clark had been a resident of South Orange in New Jersey before he retired to Florida. He became a local legend in Paterson after his tenure at Eastside High School.

Clark demanded obedience through an autocratic approach. He was known for wielding a baseball bat and a bullhorn while patrolling the hallways of the Park Avenue high school. His work at Eastside High School was turned into a movie called “Lean on Me.” Clark was played by Morgan Freeman.
Clark’s exploits were covered in the national media. He received praise from president Ronald Reagan for his tough approach. He did not receive much praise from parents, whose kids he tossed out of the school (Clark threw out 300 students in his first year, 1982) or the school board, whose authority he undermined.
“I don’t just categorically extirpate young people out of school, but I am categorically emphatic that we cannot any longer condone hooliganism, aberrant behavior, deviant behavior in those schools,” said Clark in a CNN interview when asked about his practice of tossing troublemakers out of his school. “I’m convinced that young people, the vast majority, deserve the right to an environment that’s conducive to learning.”
Clark explained the students tossed out were “unproductive” adults — 18, 19, and 20 years old. He described them as “grown men and women that the system failed” by not providing alternative education for people who could not function in a traditional setting.
He had to deal with violence, drug dealing, and low-test scores in the school. Eastside High School continues to suffer from some of the same problems today.
Clark’s hardline approach irked the school board which drew up insubordination charges that were later dropped. He was ordered suspended in 1989 for allegedly arranging strippers to perform at a school assembly.
“I must state forthrightly that I am a benevolent dictator,” said Clark during the CNN interview.
Clark was born in Rochelle, Georgia on May 8, 1938. His family moved to Newark, New Jersey when he was six years old. After graduating from Newark Central High School, he obtained a bachelor’s degree from William Paterson University. He obtained a master’s degree from Seton Hall University and received an honorary doctorate from the U.S. Sports Academy.
He served as a U.S. Army Reserve sergeant and drill instructor after college. His experience in the U.S. Army Reserve shaped his outlook and turned him into a stern disciplinarian.
Clark served as a grade school teacher in Paterson and as director of camps and playgrounds in Essex County. He then became principal of School 6. His family said he transformed the school from failing to the so-called “Miracle of Carroll Street.”
After he left Eastside High School in 1989, Clark worked as director of the Essex County Detention House, a juvenile detention center in Newark, for six years. He also wrote a book “Laying Down the Law: Joe Clark’s Strategy for Saving Our Schools,” chronicling his experience at Eastside High School.
Clark’s wife Gloria, who he met at Eastside High School, died last year. Clark left behind his children Joetta, Hazel, and JJ, and grandchildren, Talitha, Jorell, and Hazel.
https://patersontimes.com/2020/12/2...e-high-school-principal-joe-clark-dies-at-82/
 

bdquest9

To teach the truth to the young black youth
BGOL Investor
I’ll never forget we were one of 9 teams at a summer football camp in north Jersey with Eastside H.S. Every night before dinner the entire football team stood up at their table and sang that song. After the second night everyone knew that song and we all sang along. This was back in the early 90’s way after Joe Clarke left that school. Showed what an impact he had on that school.
 

jack walsh13

Jack Walsh 13
BGOL Investor
True story. I worked with a guy who lived next door to him when he was at Eastside high. During the Summertime Mr. Clark would make a bunch of lemonade for the kids and sit on his porch. He would talk to the neighborhood children and parents. He would have different workbooks and books for kids to take home and work on. He would help them with their work. He was all about education. Thing was, if you walked by his house and he didn't know you, say you stopped in front of his house to tie your shoe. He would assume you were a drug dealer and he would say, "oh no, he'll no, not today. Get yo goddam ass away from here you goddam drug dealer. You ain't dealin' no fuckin drugs around here!!" He had the baseball bat and would approach a muthafucka too. With no hesitation. The real drug dealers in the neighborhood knew what he was about and just left him alone. That's actually where the nickname "Crazy Joe" came from. From the hood. There was one time at least my coworker recalled a dude was bout the shit and pulled a gun back on Joe. He wasn't from the hood and didn't know Joe. Fortunately other people from the hood was out there and told dude chill. That's Crazy Joe, let him be. Just keep movin'. Niggas actually looked out for Joe cause they knew what he was about. My coworker even said Joe raised up on him one time wit the bat till he yelled "Goddam Joe, it's me, Saeed fuck!!!." Joe said, "Oh, sorry about that my friend. You can never be too sure wit all these goddam drug dealers." :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: I'll never forget that story. R.I.P.

iopSus.jpg
 

34real

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
In my city my school I attended was Eastside high the dumping grounds for bad leadership,teachers,sentrys,police and staff.On the books was 2400 students registered for a school that could handle maybe 1000 tops....it was so much shit going on there,criminal we needed a Joe Clark.

And I could imagine how many other schools around the country need a Joe Clark to come clean up shit.
 

Amajorfucup

Rising Star
Platinum Member
“I don’t just categorically extirpate young people out of school, but I am categorically emphatic that we cannot any longer condone hooliganism, aberrant behavior, deviant behavior in those schools,” said Clark in a CNN interview when asked about his practice of tossing troublemakers out of his school. “I’m convinced that young people, the vast majority, deserve the right to an environment that’s conducive to learning.”
Clark explained the students tossed out were “unproductive” adults — 18, 19, and 20 years old. He described them as “grown men and women that the system failed” by not providing alternative education for people who could not function in a traditional setting.
He had to deal with violence, drug dealing, and low-test scores in the school. Eastside High School continues to suffer from some of the same problems today.
Real shit he said there.


RIP brother.
 

Entrepronegro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
We need more principals and leaders of schools like him. A lot of schools still have fucked up administrations, they need some Mr. Clark staff to handle things.
 
Top