Showing posts with label Hickory Colored School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hickory Colored School. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Black Schools Restored as Landmarks

This from the New York Times:

Until 1923, the only school in the largely black farm settlement of Pine Grove was the one hand-built by parents, a drafty wooden structure in the churchyard. Anyone who could read and write could serve as teacher. With no desks and paper scarce, teachers used painted wood for a blackboard, and an open fireplace provided flashes of warmth to the lucky students who sat close.


This changed after a Chicago philanthropist named Julius Rosenwald, the president of Sears, Roebuck, took up the cause of long-neglected education for blacks at the urging of Booker T. Washington, the proponent of black self-help. By the late 1920s, one in three rural black pupils in 15 states were attending a new school built with seed money, architectural advice and supplies from the Rosenwald Fund.

“It was a big step up, going to a school that was painted and had a potbellied stove,” said Rubie Schumpert, 92, one of nine siblings who attended the Rosenwald school in Pine Grove — and one of three sisters who went on to college and careers as teachers.

If the desks and textbooks were hand-me-downs from white schools, at least there were real blackboards and rough paper for writing. If there was still no electricity, columns of windows maximized the natural light.

Today, this hard-used wooden building, which narrowly escaped demolition, is one of several dozen Rosenwald schools being restored as landmarks — newly appreciated relics of important chapters in philanthropy and black education. The schools were a turning point, sparking improved, if still unequal, education for much of the South, historians say....

The Hickory Colored School in Mayfield, Ky. The building is being restored and was moved to the Graves County High School campus.

Hat tip to Al Cross at the Rural Blog.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Graves school dating to 1925 rides to new home

This from the Paducah Sun (subscription), Photo by Lance Dennee:

The Hickory Colored School slows traffic as a truck moves it on U.S. 45 on Tuesday morning. The truck traveled 5 miles to Graves County High School, where the building will be renovated.

MAYFIELD, Ky. - Soggy weather couldn't dampen the enthusiasm of Debbie Smith and Kim Wheeler as they stood out in the rain Tuesday morning watching the Hickory Colored School move to its new home on the Graves County High School campus.

“We’re excited to even get it on the road,” said Smith, Gifted and Talented coordinator/teacher for Graves County. “This is the second chapter. We have another chapter to go with it being restored.”

The women found the one-room school on Southern Alley, off Ky. 1241, in Hickory three years ago while researching the Chalk Dust Project, the school system’s initiative to find and chronicle all the county schools. The House family, whose members live mostly out of state, then donated the school to the school system for the purpose of restoration.

The Hickory School, built in 1925 for black students, was funded in part by Julius Rosenwald, a former president of Sears, Roebuck & Co., who started a foundation to build schools for blacks from 1917 to 1932. By 1932, more than 5,300 Rosenwald school buildings, teachers’ homes and vocational school buildings had been built in 15 states, mostly in the South, but the schools are now on the National Trust for Preservation’s list of the 11 most endangered buildings in the United States.

It took most of a $50,000 grant from Lowe’s and the National Trust for Historic Preservation to move the fragile building. A former student, Walter Lynn, 85, even stopped to witness the move. “He was kind of sad to see it go, but happy it was going to be saved,” said Wheeler, community education director.

Edwards Moving Co. of Louisville moved the school, without its roof and floor, to the high school campus. It will be placed on a foundation today in a wooded area visible from the Purchase Parkway.

“We want it to be seen from the parkway so people can see we’re progressive but we also look to our past and heritage because that is what made us today,” Smith said.

Plans are to restore the school and convert it into a museum and learning center. Vocational students are going to rewire it for electricity and work on the original windows. “We’re going to have to beat the bushes to find money,” Smith said. “We’re hoping some civic clubs and even some local individuals will help us out. It’s just kind of fallen together. I’ve talked to teachers and they are so excited about the museum and learning center. They can spend all day and have their kids bring their lunch just like they brought their lunch in the 1920s and ’30s.”

The Chalk Dust book, featuring the history of more than 150 county schools, will be completed next week. It will sell for $10, and is available from Wheeler at
kimberley.wheeler@graves.kyschools.us.