Chattanooga Times Free Press

Board considers removing high school’s Rebel mascot

- BY BEN BENTON STAFF WRITER

The Franklin County Board of Education heard from four speakers Monday night regarding the embattled Franklin County High School “Rebel” mascot, one wanting to keep the mascot, two seeking to remove it and a fourth offering up the option of keeping and modernizin­g him.

The controvers­ial Rebel mascot has ties to the Confederac­y and racism throughout its past, its opponents say, while Rebel supporters say the offensive Confederat­e flag and old school song “Dixie” were removed years ago and the gray-suited cartoon “Rebel” general shouldn’t offend anybody.

“History does not belong to any of us, it belongs to all of us,” Franklin County resident and Rebel mascot supporter Michael Bradford told board members Monday.

“You have been petitioned to remove our Rebel mascot. The reasons are twofold, and they are based on falsehoods,” Bradford said.

Bradford said the first falsehood is that a rebel by definition is a link to the Confederac­y, but he said a rebel is really “a person who stands up for their own personal opinions despite what anyone else says.”

Bradford said the second falsehood is that America and Franklin County “have systemic racism.”

Bradford pointed to quotes by Jesus and conservati­ve Black leaders in history, modern culture and in

government like Candace Owens, Dr. Thomas Sowell, U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Developmen­t Dr. Ben Carson and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

“These are admirable Black leaders that we should listen to, not Black Lives Matter, who define themselves as trained Marxists,” Bradford said.

He said the Rebel for 70 years was “an important tradition,” and for some Franklin County High alumni is “all they have left of their youth.”

“Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, ‘A man should be judged by the content of his character, not the color of his skin,’” Bradford said. “Although Mr. Rebel is fictional, I hope you’ll extend him the same courtesy. If you don’t, Col. Harland Sanders, rest in peace, might want to watch his back also.”

But Shanae Williams says the Rebel is not only offensive, it’s a violation of school system policy and to keep it is to embrace its negative symbolism and history in Franklin County as a holdover from the past.

The Rebel, also called Mr. Rebel or Col. Rebel, has been the high school mascot since 1950 and it often has been a lightning rod of controvers­y, even when the old high school was replaced with a new facility 15 years ago, according to Franklin County director of schools Stanley Bean.

The current 310,000-square-foot Franklin County High School graduated its first class in 2005, after the old school was retired in favor of a new, larger site. There’s no outward sign of the the Rebel image at the school, but the name exists on a campus road, Rebel Drive, on team uniforms, fan wear, equipment and in other sports programs and activities.

At least one petition seeking its removal had more than 4,800 signatures on Tuesday.

Williams, who started that petition, said parents on both sides of the issue are losing sight of the teenage students who simply want the best high school memories.

A counter protest parade against changing the Rebel mascot Monday evening in Winchester prior to the school board meeting “took us back to the ’90s,” Williams said. “That same parade happened in the ’90s. Those same people who participat­ed in that parade today were students back then.”

Williams said Franklin County’s delay in combining both races in schools until 1966 drove deep the feelings of being left out.

“So in ’66 we still were not included, we still had no actual culture of our own and we were forced into the Rebels, we were forced into the white-only student body that was previously there, we were forced into their culture,” Williams said. “We were forced into their beliefs, we were forced into this system.

“Today, I’m asking that we think about, not me, not the people in this room, but [that] we think about our kids,” she said. “It’s not about Black Lives Matter. Black lives do matter but I’m not that movement. I didn’t come here to say ‘Black Lives Matter so you must change this mascot.’

“What I’m saying is, if all lives really matter, I present you that chance to prove it,” Williams said.

“People are here today that were here before I was ever thought of and this was an issue then. It doesn’t reoccur for no reason. It doesn’t come up for no reason,” Williams said. “We can’t keep pacifying it and keep putting it off until the next time and the next time. We’re going to be out of time soon.”

Seeking some common ground, class of 1994 graduate and former Rebels football player Danny Owens called for a more compromisi­ng solution. Owens said he was a Rebel football player when now-director of schools Bean was a coach.

“I saw Confederat­e flags come down. I saw the original walkout. I’ve seen this before,” Owens said. “I’m here tonight to call for compassion and reason.”

Owens said small rural communitie­s with only one or two high schools are often identified by those team names and mascots, noting neighborin­g communitie­s/schools like the Tullahoma Wildcats, Lincoln County Falcons, Moore County Raiders and Putnam County Hornets.

“Removing a community’s identity creates a wound and it’s a wound in this case that might not heal,” Owens said. “There’ll be hurt, anger and fear.”

Owens pointed to controvers­ies surroundin­g other athletic teams in the world, like the South African rugby team, Springbok, that held onto its identity despite its links to institutio­nalized segregatio­n known as Apartheid to keep fans on both sides of the Apartheid issue united. He also noted Middle Tennessee State University’s links to Nathan Bedford Forest that were done away with in the 1960s and the Raider mascot that was diluted over the years from its original symbols.

Owens called for Franklin County High’s mascot to be “modernized,” and he said he could offer different ideas of a modernized logo.

“I argue for retention [of the Rebel] but I think there’s an issue,” he said. “We can’t be united with exclusion in the past.”

Franklin County Board of Education members didn’t take up any discussion on the mascot and have not responded to recent inquiries about their thoughts on the issue. The elected panel isn’t set to take up a discussion on the Rebel until October, according to Franklin County Schools central office officials.

The discussion was delayed from an original discussion date of Aug. 3 because of the scramble to reopen schools, Bean said at the time. He said board members want to be able to focus on the mascot issue without distractio­n.

The last speaker to address the board graduated from Franklin County’s all-African American Townsend School in 1958.

“In 1966, desegregat­ion, not integratio­n, closed Townsend High School,” a fiery Barbara Blackwell Brannon told the board.

“Townsend is the high school where I learned, where I thrived. It was the place where I was a leader, a place where I was a Tiger, a place where I was proud of who I was,” Brannon said. ”Our children and our grandchild­ren will never experience this pride.”

The only school pride Black students might have at Franklin County High “will always have a stain as long as there is a Rebel mascot,” she said. “They have been robbed of their culture. They have been made to accept your culture. After all, it’s the only game in town.”

Brannon called for the board to change course immediatel­y to unify the county.

“We cannot accept any more olive branches. Next time? Give us a time. Wait for the right time? The time is now,” Brannon told board members. “We hold you accountabl­e. The world is watching and the world is changing; even Mississipp­i. Franklin County, let’s join together and make a change.”

Board members are expected to take up the issue when the panel meets Oct. 12, according to officials.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D IMAGE ?? Franklin County High School’s 1950 yearbook features the school’s Rebel mascot.
CONTRIBUTE­D IMAGE Franklin County High School’s 1950 yearbook features the school’s Rebel mascot.

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