PATERSON — Joe Louis Clark, the New Jersey high school disciplinarian who was the inspiration for the Morgan Freeman role in the 1989 movie "Lean on Me" died on Tuesday. He was 82.

Known for carrying a signature baseball bat and bullhorn, Clark once expelled 300 students on a single day from the city's failing East Side High School.

An inspiration to students in the schools where he worked, Clark also raised a family that reached great heights. His daughters Joetta Clark Diggs and Hazel Clark were members of the U.S. Olympic track and field team. His son, Joe "JJ" Clark Jr., was their coach and last year was named the director of track and field and cross country at Stanford University.

Clark's scorched-earth approach earned him plaudits as well as condemnation, including from critics who disagreed with Clark's methods of expelling at-risk students who were mostly poor, Black and Latino.

Story continues below photos.

Local controversy turned into national headlines. President Ronald Reagan invited him to become a White House policy advisor. He was interviewed on "60 Minutes," "The Arsenio Hall Show" and was on the cover of Time. Then came Hollywood.

Enter your number to get our free mobile app

Freeman played Clark in the movie about the crime-infested city high school that faces a state takeover before Clark inspires the staff and student body to succeed on a standardized test. The movie shows Clark being arrested for chaining the school's doors shut in order to keep out miscreants involved with drugs and violence. The film climaxes with students and parents rallying to save his job.

His family's obituary says Clark "explained that the bat was not a weapon but a symbol of choice: a student could either strike out or hit a home run."

Born in Rochelle, Georgia, on May 8, 1938, his family moved to Newark when he was 6 years old. He graduated from Newark's Central High School and obtained a bachelor's degree from William Paterson College and a master's degree from Seton Hall University.

After serving as a drill instructor in the U.S. Army Reserve, he became a teacher and eventually landed a job as principal of Paterson's School 6, a troubled school that became known as "the Miracle of Carroll Street" under his leadership, his obituary notes.

Clark left public education in 1989 and served as director of the juvenile Essex County Detention House for six years. He retired to Gainesville, Florida, where he died at home surrounded by family.

More From Townsquare Media News:

5 Work From Home Obstacles

More From 92.7 WOBM