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History : |
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History
of the Robert Russa Moton High School -
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Historical Background:
Full Text Copy (Use your browser Back arrow to return) |
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| ca. 1923 |
Parents of African-American students petition the Prince Edward County School Board to add seventh grade (and later eighth through twelfth) and thus begin creating a high school for black students.
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Part 1 |
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| 1927 |
The first Robert R. Moton School opened (now the Prince
Edward Recreation Center on South Main St.): first floor houses black
elementary students from the town of Farmville, second floor houses black
high school students from the whole county. |
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| 1939 |
After years of petitions from Afro-American parents, the county opens the second Moton building, the now historic Robert R. Moton High School (S. Main St. and Griffin Blvd.), the county's first building to house only secondary school students from the African-American community. Designed to accommodate 180 students, the school opens with 167. The earlier Moton School becomes Mary E. Branch Elementary School.
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Part 2 |
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| 1940s |
Enrollment at Moton High School increases to more than 450 by 1950; refusing to erect a new building to handle such overcrowding, in 1948 the county adds three wooden buildings, covered with tar-paper, around the central brick building.
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Part 3 |
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| 1951 April 23 |
Moton students, led by 16-year-old Barbara Johns, niece of civil rights pioneer Rev. Vernon Johns, walk out of the school and strike for two weeks to protest the separate but very unequal conditions under which they must study.
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Part 4 |
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| 1951 May 23 |
African-American parents and the NAACP file suit (Davis v. County School Board) to desegregate the public schools in Prince Edward.
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Part 5 |
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| 1953 September |
Opening of new, modern Robert R. Moton High School for black students, designed to accommodate 700 students (the present Prince Edward County High School, located 3 miles south of Farmville). The historic Moton High School becomes Mary E. Branch Elementary School #2. |
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| 1954 May 17 |
U. S. Supreme Court, in Brown v. Board of Education (lead case of five from throughout the country, including Davis v. County School Board), unanimously rules that racially segregated public schools are inherently unequal and therefore unconstitutional.
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Part 6 |
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| 1955 May |
After six years of delay and court cases, the Prince Edward County supervisors vote to close public schools rather than desegregate them.
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Part 7 |
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| 1963-64 |
"Free Schools" provide the first significant formal education for
African-American children in Prince Edward since 1959.
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Part 8 |
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| 1964 September |
Another Supreme Court ruling, in Griffin v. County School Board, forces the reopening of public schools in Prince Edward; the historic former Moton High School building is again Mary E. Branch Elementary School #2.
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Part 9 |
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| 1969 November |
School board changes names: the newest Moton High School becomes Prince Edward County High School, the historic Moton building becomes Farmville Elementary School.
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Part 10 |
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| 1991 April 23 |
The fortieth anniversary of the student strike at Moton is observed. First reunion held. |
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| 1994 May |
Prince Edward County Branch of the NAACP hosts 40th Anniversary of
the Brown Decision. First public call for Moton School conversion to a museum. |
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| 1994 May 17 |
New York Newsday publishes article Making It Right
in observance of the 40th anniversary of the Brown V. Board Supreme Court decision,
stating that the Prince Edward Schools are now a model for the nation. |
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| 1995 |
First reuse study of Moton is prepared by Lawrence E. Williams
A.I.A., Richmond showing possible adaptive reuse alternatives for the school.
The study was funded by Kellogg, through a grant awarded to the Branch-Moton
Historical Society and administered by the VFH. |
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| 1995 June |
The Moton school building, renamed the Mary Branch Elementary
in 1953 and later renamed Farmville Elementary, is retired from service by the
Prince Edward County Board of Education. |
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| 1996 January |
Preservation News, the magazine of the National Trust
for Historic Preservation publishes a major article on the attempt to preserve Moton. |
Members of the
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| 1996 |
The Martha E. Forrester Council of Women commits to buy the Moton
School from the County of Prince Edward for $300,000. |
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| 1996 |
The Moton building is placed on the National Registry of Historic Sites. |
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| 1996 |
Congress appropriates $200,000 to have the National Park Service draw
up a plan for converting the Moton building into a civil rights museum. |
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| 1996 July |
A strategic plan for the Martha E. Forrester Council is prepared.
Titled The Robert Russa Moton Museum: A Center for the Study of Civil Rights
in Education, it outlined the objectives for the establishment of the museum and
called for the formation of a separate corporation for managing the museum. |
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| 1996 August |
Martha E. Forrester Council of Women hosts first annual Moton
Weekend. They Closed Their Schools is republished. Author Bob Smith
attends book signing. |
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| 1996 October |
The Moton High School building is placed on the National Register
of Historic Places. |
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| 1996 October |
The U.S. Congress, in response to a request of Congressman L. F.
Payne authorizes and appropriates $200,000 for special assistance and planning
for the Robert Russa Moton Museum. |
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| 1996 November |
Moton project advisory committee convenes for the first time
with National Park Service representatives. |
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| 1997 January |
R. C. Smith, author of the 1965 book They Closed Their Schools
publishes his article Prince Edward County: Revisited and Revitalized
in the Virginia Quarterly Review. |
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| 1997 May |
National Park Service Northeast Region Director meets with
community leaders at Moton School Site. Presents scope of NPS involvement. |
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| 1997 August |
Board of Directors for the newly formed Robert Russa Moton Museum
is formed. |
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| 1997 December |
The Martha E. Forrester Council of Women makes the first payment of
$100,000 to purchase the Moton building from the county. |
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| 1998 August |
R.R. Moton High School building is designated a National Historic Landmark
by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior, the highest level of historical recognition
offered by the federal government. National Park Service Director Robert Stanton
dedicates the new Landmark on August 31st at a ceremony on the lawn at the school. |
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| 1999 |
National Park Service issues its planning study for development
of the Robert Russa Moton Museum. |
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| 2000 December |
Moton Museum board completes purchase of the Moton
School building from Prince Edward County. |
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| 2001 April 23 |
Commemoration of fiftieth anniversary of the
student strike at Moton High School. |
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Revised November 2005
Copyright © 2005 R. R. Moton Museum