Dayton Daily News

New US Civil Rights Trail leads to a little-known Virginia museum

- By Ken Woodley Special To The Washington Post Robert Russa Moton Museum

It lacks the FARMVILLE, VA. — renown of Philadelph­ia’s Independen­ce Hall, but Robert Russa Moton High School in Prince Edward County, Virginia, played a seminal role in the course of America’s human events. And now the s iteisgett ing its due - as part of the U.S. Civil Rights Trail launched this year.

T he trail comprises more t han 100 locations in 14 states. Some are wellknown, such as the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, where law enforcemen­t officers beat civil rights marc hers in 1965 on what became known as Bloody Sunday. Others are practicall­y unknown, such as Moton High; even many Virgin ians are unaware of its importance.

The trail offers a timeline of significan­t dates in the civil rights movement. The student walkout at Moton High, which happened four years before Rosa Parks refused to yield her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama - is listed first.

“A lot of folks are coming to realize that you can’t tell the civil rights history of thiscountr­ywithoutst­arting with what happened here,” said Cameron Patterson, managing director of the Robert Russa Moton Museum, which is now housed in the former high school in Farmville, as mall town of 8,000 residentsi­nc entral Virginia. As a reporter, then editor, of the Farmville Herald from 1979 to 2015, and author of an upcoming book about race relations in the county, I agree: The walkout had far-reaching consequenc­es, both locally and nationally.

On April 23, 1951, 16-yearold Barbara Rose Johns led the stude ntbodyatMo­ton High, a segregated, all-black school, into direct, nonvio- lent protest against the sep- aratist stance of “Jim Crow.”

Their two-week strike wasadefi ant public stand against the separate and clearly unequal conditions at the overcrowde­d school, which included auxiliary classrooms t hatwerelit­tle more than tar-paper shacks.

The strike was Johns’s idea, and she enlisted a few trusted student leaders, including John Arthur Stokes and John Watson, for the meticulous, highly clandestin­e planning necessaryt­ocarryitou­t.The undertakin­g was so secre- tive that Johns’s 13-year-old younger sister was caught by surprise when she watched Johns announce the strike from the stage in the Moton High auditorium. “Never in my wildest dreams,” Joan Johns Cobbs said, could she have imagined the building becoming a museum.

Initially, Johns and her Managing director of the Robert Russa Moton Museum classmates wanted a new school equal in quality to the white high school a few blocks away. After consulti ng with NAACP att orneys Oliver Hill and Spottswood Robinson III, however, the students and their families decided to seek more than “separate but equal” status. They filed suit to end school segregatio­n.

Davis v. Scho ol Board of Prince Edward County, named for ninth-grade striker Dorothy Davis, became one of five cases combined as Brown v. Board of Education. Moton High became, as the museum puts it, the “Student Birthplace of the Civil Rights Revolution.” And Farmville, the seat of Prince Edward County, would become ground zero for the fiercest and most prolonged resistance to school desegregat­ion.

Three years after the walkout, the U.S. Supreme Court decided the landmark Brown case in the plaintiffs’ favor. But the fight wasn’t over. Virginia adopted a policy known as “Massive Resistance,” and approximat­ely a dozen schools in three localities were closed in the fall of 1958.

When Virginia reversed course in February 1959, those schools reopened. But Prince Edward County’s Board of Supervisor­s voted in June 1959 to completely shut down their public schools rather than integrate. Most white stude nts were educated in a private academy, while black students were left on their own. The pub- lic schools didn’t reopen until five years later, after the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1964 decision in Griffin v. County School Board of Prince Edward County, which affirmed the constituti­onal right of every American child to a public education.

Johns and her classmates offered a powerful example of young people pointing the way by challengin­g adults “to simply live up to their own words,” Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., wrote in an email. The students, who were asked to say the Pledge of Allegiance every day, “would not accept a platitudin­ous incantatio­n of ‘liberty and justice for all’ without questionin­g the unwillingn­ess of their society to make good on the promise,” he said.

Beau Dickenson, social studies supervisor for Rock- ingham County (Virginia) Schools, considered it to be “a powerful lesson for high school students in particular because it demonstrat­es that even teenagers can leave their mark on history.” Students from Rockingha mmakethetw­ohour journey to Farmville every April for the “unique opportunit­y to experience Virginia’s civil rights history within the actual walls where these pivotal events unfolded,” Dickenson said.

The building that became a National Historic Landmark had seemed fated for demolition in the mid-1990s, when the Prince Edward County Board of Supervisor­s appeared prepared to sell the property to a developer. But public opposition emerged, and the Martha E. Forrester Council of Women launched an ultimately successful campaign to pur- chase the build ingandturn it into a museum.

The mu s e um , which opened in 2001, averages 10,000 visitors annually. Its six galleries tell the story from the Johns-led student strike, through the Brown decision and “Massive Resistance,” to the rebirth of pub- lic schools in the community.

The trail’s interactiv­e website (civilright­strail. com ) provides informatio­n about the museum and the statue honoring Johns on the grounds o f the state Capitol in Richmond, as well as a wealth of other resources to help followers understand the fight for civil rights.

“The old adage is true,” said U.S. Civil Rights Trail Chairman Lee Sentell, who is also director of the Ala- bama Tourism Department. “We must know our history if we are not to repeat the mistakes of our past.”

Prince Edward County seems determined not to repeat those mistakes. In 2008, its multiracia­l Board of Supervisor­s installed a light dedicated to Johns and the students, which shines in the tower atop the same courthouse in which their counterpar­ts voted to shut down p ublic edu- cation. On its marker, the county expresses regret for the pain it caused and the lost opportuni tiesand dreams. And last year, the Farmville Town Council renamed the community’s public library in honor of Johns, who married the Rev. William Powell, had five children and became a librar- ian in Philadelph­ia’s public schools. She died in 1991.

Cobbs said her late sister “would be so shocked, but pleased” by these develop- ments. While the light brings back painful memories, “at the same time, it reminds me of the fact that there are people of goodwill who seek to heal the community by their actions,” she said. “So,Ifee l a sense of peace whenIsee the light.”

The county, which is 64 percent white and 32 percent black, according to 2015 Census Bureau data, has changed in other ways since shutting its doors to black students 59 years ago. It gave President Barack Obama a majority of its votes in 2008 and 2012, and did the same for Hill- ary Clinton in 2016, one of just a handful of blue juris- dictions in a sea of red.

The museum is prominentl­y featured on the community’s online tourism hub, Visitfarmv­ille.com. (Other local attraction­s include the 31-mile-long High Bridge Trail State Park, which is popular with hikers, joggers, cyclists and horseback riders, and the four-mile Farmville Blueway Paddle Trail, which attracts canoeists and kayakers.) Its inclusion on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail is being greeted enthusiast­ically by black and white residents alike.

Scott Harwood Sr. had finished his sophomore year in high school when the public schools closed, and would go on to graduate from the private, all-white Prince Edward Academy, now closed. “It’s fantastic” that the museum is now on the U.S. Civil Rights Trail, he said. “I’ve always thought it was a hidden jewel… . It has the fairest, most well-balanced storytelli­ng that I’ve seen.”

A member of the academy’s first graduating class, Gene Watson, said the museum “is something we’reproudof….It’sareal plus for the community.”

Pattie Cooper-Jones, the first African-American woman to chair the Prince Edward County Board of Supervisor­s, shares their pride in the museum. And she s aid that she sees the trail as more than a tool for tourism. “Its most important i mpact will be on the education of a whole new generation of Americans on the struggle to provide equal rights,” she said. “With the increased polarizati­on in America, this trail, and the story it tells, is especially poign ant and needs to be heard by every citizen.”

Dickenson, the social studies director, is glad the U.S. Civil Rights Trail will lead more visitors to the museum. “It is particular­ly encouragin­g to see the students of today embrace the difficult stories of previous generation­s in order to better understand our present circumstan­ces,” he said. “This fills me with hope that the current generation will bring about a brighter tomorrow.”

‘A lot of folks are coming to realize that you can’t tell the civil rights history of this country without starting with what happened here.’

Cameron Patterson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States