![[Moton School Logo]](../images/logo.jpg)
Moton Museum Will Anchor 12-County
Civil Rights Trail
Picture and caption courtesy of Farmville Herald - February 2nd, 2001
Rodney Lewis of Old Dominion Resource Conservation &
Development Inc., second from left, installed the civil rights heritage
trail sign for the Moton Museum site with, from left, former museum board
president Thomas Mayfield, treasurer Hugh Kennedy, and new president,
Lt.
Gen. Samuel V. Wilson. (Photo by Marge Swayne)
Project Could Generate
More Than $30 Million Annually
A project that could generate over $30 million annually for 12 counties
and the city of Petersburg will have Prince Edward County and the Robert
Russa Moton Museum as its hub.
J. Rodney Lewis, coordinator of Old Dominion Resource Conservation
and Development Inc. (RC&D), joined museum representatives
last week to install a sign at the former Moton High School for the
Civil Rights in Education Heritage Trail.
The sign is one of approximately 24 being erected in Appomattox,
Charlotte, Cumberland, Buckingham, Prince Edward, Amelia, Nottoway,
Dinwiddie, Lunenburg, Halifax and Petersburg.
"The strength of this whole trail is bringing the communities together
... This trail will pull folks together. Folks who never worked together,"
Lewis said Thursday morning. "Unity is the key. It will pull communities
together."
The 489-mile Civil Rights in Education Heritage Trail is expected to
open in the year 2003 and has received federal grant funding of $240,000
for the project.
The trail will focus on historic sites that relate to civil rights in
education for African Americans, Native Americans, and women, as well as
other significant contributions to education.
"It's basically going to show the evolution of education in the southern
Piedmont region of Virginia," Lewis said, and how the region contributed
to the evolution of education across the nation.
Virginia led the nation in many things, "Lewis said, "and education
is one of them."
Many of Virginia's contribution are unknown. The trail plans to change
that.
"It's going to bring awareness to a lot of historical events that people
were just not aware of before. It will tell history," said Lewis, "in
a way that it's never been told in its entirety before."
The Moton Museum was chosen as the Trail's anchor for historic and
geographic reasons.
"Because it's a National Landmark and just by being elevated to that
status it's an attraction," said Lewis, "and then its geographic
location being in the center of the trail. People could leave the
Moton Museum and go in any direction and follow the trail, east,
west, north and south."
The sign proclaiming the former R.R. Moton High School as the "birthplace
of the movement for civil rights in education" was paid for, in part, by
a $1,500 grant from the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.
The potential $30 million-plus annual economic impact prediction by the
Old Dominion RC&D is based on a "conservative estimate of current
visitor revenues to other new historic venues in the area," according to
a report presented to the R.R. Moton Museum board of directors.
The trail could also generate the equivalent of 1,100 full-time jobs
for the region, the old Dominion RC&D analysis estimates, as
travel-related positions in the food and lodging industry, and others,
are created to accommodate tourists.
"The audience for this trail will be school children. The other audience
will be retirees who want to travel in the country to learn about history
and learn," said Lewis, " about the sacrifices made to bring education to
all Americans, how education evolved, the story of education."
The collection of sites was researched across the region and a Trail
and Tourism Plan developed. The Old Dominion RC&D is undertaking
what it describes as a "major effort to create the necessary synergies
between local accommodations and other businesses and Trail segments."
According to Old Dominion RC&D documents "packages" will be developed
for "travelers who want to buy their accommodations, admissions ... in one
convenient purchase ... Marketing these packages through Virginia Tourism
and other available resources will begin to generate revenues for the local
area on a short-term basis immediately after Trail implementation has been
completed."
Lewis said week-long packages and side trips will be developed and offered
"and lots of other things to expand on this."
The Trail is considered a three-day event, divided in three segments, with
a full-day of sites in Prince Edward.
In addition to the Moton Museum, other Prince Edward sites - and their
place in history (as described the Old Dominion RC&D) - will include:
-
Prince Edward County Schools - "considered by educators to be the most
successful contemporary, integrated program existing at the five locations
across the United States involved in the Brown vs Board of Education
court case."
-
Fuqua School - "the site of the former Prince Edward Academy started
in 1959 for Caucasian children when the schools in Prince Edward County
closed. Fuqua School offers an education for all students, demonstrating
changes have occurred in education."
-
Longwood College - "exhibits which reflect the changes that have
occurred in women's education .. throughout Virginia history."
-
Hampden-Sydney College - "the site of an historical exhibit relating
to male education since the Revolutionary War."
-
Vernon Johns Grave Site - "Reverend Vernon Johns preceded the
Reverend Martin Luther King, Kr. at the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church
in Montgomery, Alabama. Also the uncle of Barbara Johns who led
the first non-violent student strike at the R.R. Moton High School
in 1951."
In Cumberland, the tour will include:
-
Cumberland Courthouse - "the site of a display of documents about
the Literary Fund established by Cumberland County to support education
for the economically disadvantaged in 1806, well before Virginia
legislated that every county should have a Literary Fund for this
purpose."
-
Rosenwald School at Cartersville- "one of the schools established
through the cooperation of the Julius Rosenwald Fund and African
American parents interested in having their children educated."
In Buckingham, the tour will include:
-
Carter G. Woodson Birthplace - "born in Buckingham County
and considered to be the Father of African American history, a
project will be undertaken to relate the impact of Dr. Woodson
on American education since no existing structure is still standing
at his birthplace. A trail sign has also been erected at this location
- funded by a grant from the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities -
one of three already in place. The third is the Thyne Institute in
Mecklenburg."
Signs at other locations across the 13-jurisdiction area will be erected
as the project proceeds towards its 2003 opening.
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