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![[Moton School Logo]](../images/logo.jpg)
Moton Museum Completes Purchase
Of Building From County
Picture and caption courtesy of Farmville Herald - December 22, 2000
Robert Russa Moton Museum board of directors president, Thomas Mayfield, left, shares a happy moment with
Prince Edward County board of supervisors chairman, Hunter R. Watson.
The museum board had just completed purchase of the
former R.R. Moton High School,
giving the county a $100,000 check.
News Release - December 20, 2000
Christmas came early for supporters of the Robert R. Moton Museum.
On December 20, after five years of concerted fund-raising
efforts, backers of the new civil rights museum succeeded in completing the
$300,000 purchase of the historic Robert R. Moton High School building from
Prince Edward County. Thomas Mayfield, president of the museum's board of
directors, and Hugh Kennedy, treasurer, presented a check for $100,000 to
Hunter R. Watson, chair of the county board of supervisors, to complete the
purchase. Museum board members and supporters applauded as Watson accepted
the final check.
The Moton building was the scene of a historic student strike in
April 1951 which in effect marked the beginning of the Civil Rights
Movement. Led by 16-year-old Barbara Johns, niece of civil rights pioneer
Rev. Vernon Johns, the students at the all-black Moton High School staged a
two-week strike to protest the separate and very unequal conditions under
which they were forced to study. The school, which opened in 1939, had
been designed to house 180 students; 12 years later, 450 students attended
Moton. To accommodate the overflow, the county had built three "tarpaper
shacks" beside the main brick building. Other resources at the school were
also dramatically inadequate.
The student strike soon led to the filing of a suit by black
parents against the county school board. Handled by NAACP attorneys
Spottswood Robinson and Oliver Hill, the suit demanded
not just equal facilities for black students, but the desegregation of the
county's public schools. That case was one of five bundled together in
what became the Supreme Court's most important ruling of the 20th century,
Brown v. Board of Education . In that 1954 decision, the court struck down
racial segregation in public schools as inherently unequal and hence
unconstitutional.
The Moton building continued to be used as a school by the county
until 1995. At that point the Martha E. Forrester Council of Women set out
to purchase the school and turn it into a center for the study of civil
rights in education. Two years later the Moton Museum was incorporated and
an autonomous board established. In 1998 the Moton building was designated
a National Historic Landmark.
Backers of the museum project worked tirelessly for five years to
raise the $300,000 purchase price, getting $125,000 from the General
Assembly, $25,000 in a grant from Virginia Power, and the remaining half
from a large number of small donations. Museum volunteers praised the
grassroots support which it has received from black and white contributors
alike and expressed their delight at completing the purchase of the
building. Said President Mayfield: "It's one of the highlights of my life
to be able to present this check to the county for the final payment on
this building. Now we can go on to higher things."
The Moton Museum has recently received a grant from the Virginia
Foundation for the Humanities which will enable it to prepare and mount an
exhibition of the school's history. Formal opening of the museum for
regular hours is scheduled for April 23, 2001-the fiftieth anniversary of
the student strike.
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