Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

HISTORIC CHARLESTON

Town’s rich history is significan­t on and off the football field

- RICK FIRES

CHARLESTON— Charleston is well-known in Arkansas as a small-school football power that’s won multiple state championsh­ips.

But did you know Charleston was the first school, not only in Arkansas but in all of the states of the former Confederac­y, to integrate following the landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling?

Did you know Charleston was home to Dale Bumpers, a longtime former senator and governor from Arkansas who titled his biography “The Best Lawyer in a One-Lawyer Town”?

Or, did you know Steve Cox, a former Charleston Tiger and Arkansas Razorback, kicked a 60-yard field goal as a member of the NFL’s Cleveland Browns in the 1980s?

These stories and more can be found at the Belle Museum and Chapel where Mary Belle Ervin, at 94 years old, is a walking and talking historian who taught school in Charleston for 54 years.

There’s also a display at the front of the middle school that tells the story of integratio­n in Charleston, including testimonia­ls from Joe Ferguson Jr. and Barbara Williams, the first Black male and female respective­ly, to graduate from Charleston High School.

The U.S. Supreme Court handed down its decision on Brown v. Board of Education on May 4, 1954, and the Charleston School District reacted swiftly by admitting 13 Black students when its elementary and high school opened on Aug. 23, 1954. Previously, Black students went through eighth grade at Rosenwald in Charleston before being bused nearly 25 miles to Lincoln High School in Fort Smith to earn their high school diplomas.

The process for integratio­n in Charleston went smoothly, unlike the chaos that ensued in 1957 when nine black students tried to enter Little Rock Central High School.

“The people in town knew all of the [ Black] families, and we integrated so quickly,” Bell Ervin said of the Supreme Court’s decision that overturned the “separate but equal” doctrine. “We have a good school. Charleston is a wonderful town with people who are full of compassion, and they care about others.”

In football, Charleston became an establishe­d winner under Shane Storey, who coached the Tigers from 1992-2004 and compiled a record of 119 wins, 28 losses and 1 tie before moving into administra­tion at the school.

Charleston had a breakthrou­gh season in 2005 when the Tigers captured the Class AA state championsh­ip with a 22-9 victory over Dierks at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock. Charleston finished as state runners-up the year before in 2004 when Rison won 30-15 over the Tigers to complete a 15-0 season.

In 2005, Charleston earned the trophy and finished 13-1 with a team led by coach Stephen Wood and star players like Alex Pelayo, Eduardo Carmona and Matt Stewart, who finished 38-3-1 as a two-year starter at quarterbac­k for the Tigers.

“In 2004, we didn’t allow any points in the playoffs until that final game, and that was very humbling,” said Stewart, who is in his 10th season as an assistant football coach at Charleston. “So, I didn’t want to end up anywhere but that stadium in Little Rock in 2005. That was our end-all, be-all and we had to win.”

That first state championsh­ip for Charleston served as a springboar­d for a dominant stretch that included numerous conference championsh­ips and state championsh­ips in 2008, 2011, 2013 and 2014. Charleston cemented its reputation as a smallschoo­l power with a 15-0 record in 2013 and a 14-0 record in 2014. Those teams were led by quarterbac­k Ty Storey, who culminated his fantastic high school career by guiding Charleston to a tough 33-26 win over Smackover in 2014 to extend the Tigers’ winning streak to 29 consecutiv­e with back-to-back state titles.

Storey later played at the University of Arkansas then came back to beat the Razorbacks 45-19 on their home field in 2019 after he transferre­d as a graduate student to Western Kentucky. That was a fantastic “how do you like me now?” appearance for Storey, who had been passed over as the starting quarterbac­k at Arkansas and is now an assistant high school football coach at Bentonvill­e West.

Charleston has produced a string of standout athletes, including Storey, Doc Crowley, and Brandon Scott, the Tigers’ current quarterbac­k who is also a standout basketball player. But no one has yet to surpass Cox, a punter and placekicke­r who played eight years in the NFL and earned a Super Bowl ring with the Washington Redskins at Super Bowl XXII in 1988.

Cox, one of the last of the straight-on style kickers in the NFL, made a 60-yard field goal for Cleveland against Cincinnati in 1984 which, at the time, was the second-longest behind Tom Dempsey’s 63-yard field goal against Detroit.

Cox, who became a successful businessma­n in finance in Jonesboro after his playing career, was inducted into the Arkansas Sports Hall of Fame in 2004.

Charleston is putting together another successful season with Scott leading the way at quarterbac­k for the Tigers, who are 5-1 heading into tonight’s 3A-1 Conference game against Hackett.

“Ability alone, he’s a very special athlete,” said Stewart, who rates Scott atop the heap of the great athletes who’ve played for the Tigers. “The thing most people overlook is his intelligen­ce. He’s well above a 4.0 GPA and he studies the game and knows what to do. He can run the whole show with our offense but he still needs the five guys up from to put his talent on display for everybody.”

Scott and his teammates will have to be at their very best next Friday when Charleston travels to Booneville, another small-school power and a newcomer to the 3A-1 Conference, where the Tigers have won seven of the past 10 conference championsh­ips.

Booneville won five straight conference championsh­ips in the 3A-4 Conference before moving to the 3A-1 for the 2022-2024 reclassifi­cation cycle.

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) ?? Matt Stewart, offensive coordinato­r and Charleston football player from 2003-2005, poses for a portrait Oct. 3 at Charleston High School in Charleston. Visit nwaonline. com/221014Dail­y/ for today’s photo gallery.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) Matt Stewart, offensive coordinato­r and Charleston football player from 2003-2005, poses for a portrait Oct. 3 at Charleston High School in Charleston. Visit nwaonline. com/221014Dail­y/ for today’s photo gallery.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) ?? Public art is displayed Oct. 3 on a wall of Charleston Middle School in Charleston.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) Public art is displayed Oct. 3 on a wall of Charleston Middle School in Charleston.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) ?? Paul David Gramlich, museum volunteer, flips through a 1921 copy of the Charleston­ian, an annual showing, showing Tigers football uniforms, Oct. 3 at the Belle Museum and Chapel in Charleston.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) Paul David Gramlich, museum volunteer, flips through a 1921 copy of the Charleston­ian, an annual showing, showing Tigers football uniforms, Oct. 3 at the Belle Museum and Chapel in Charleston.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) ?? An image of Charleston’s Main Street from 1910 is displayed Oct. 3 at the Belle Museum and Chapel.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) An image of Charleston’s Main Street from 1910 is displayed Oct. 3 at the Belle Museum and Chapel.
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