Orlando Sentinel

Some want Stonewall Jackson Middle School name changed

Residents push to replace reference to Confederat­e general

- By Leslie Postal

As a seventh grader at Stonewall Jackson Middle School, Jose Rodriguez, played the trumpet in the school band and put up with constant taunting from another boy in his section.

One day Rodriguez, a transplant from Puerto Rico, tried to stand up for himself. The response was a racial slur, then a moment Rodriguez never forgets: “The trumpet case crashing to my face and me on the floor.”

He still remembers the instrument case used as a weapon — because it was decorated with a Confederat­e flag sticker.

Today, Rodriguez, 39, is called father and presides at the Episcopal church Iglesia Jesus de Nazaret, which sits less than two miles from Stonewall Jackson’s campus in east Orlando.

He wants the middle school’s name changed. So do other residents.

The name of the Confederat­e general, “a man who promoted oppression,” represents a “legacy of prejudice and discrimina­tion” that doesn’t belong on a public school, Rodriguez said.

“That name hurts,” he said, and serves as a symbol that, even when he was a boy in the early 1990s, made his white antagonist feel he could bully and strike a student who, in his view, didn’t belong.

The Orange County School

Board likely will take up the issue of the school’s name in early 2020.

The school, off State Road 436, is the only one in Central Florida still named for a hero of the Confederac­y.

Confederat­e names and statutes — which some view as symbols of slavery and white supremacy but others as key slices of American history — have been the source of intense scrutiny and debate nationwide since the June 2015 shooting deaths in a black church in Charleston, S.C. The convicted killer was a white supremacis­t who posed for photos with a Confederat­e flag.

Orange’s school board voted in 2017 to change the name of Robert E. Lee Middle School to College Park Middle School.

Stonewall Jackson, which opened in 1965, was once all white but now serves a largely Hispanic population, with many of its students from families who moved here from

Puerto Rico.

Stonewall Jackson’s school advisory council — a panel made up of educators, parents and community members — said last year that it wanted a new name and then this fall voted to recommend the “Stonewall” be dropped and the school be known simply as Jackson Middle.

Though two signs on the school spell out its full name, the school’s website uses only Jackson, as does a newer sign on the school marquee. About a decade ago the school changed its mascot from the raiders, a reference to the General Jackson’s troops, to the jaguars.

But the Jackson-only option doesn’t sit well with Rodriguez and some other residents pushing for a name change. They said that still honors Stonewall Jackson, especially given its location on Stonewall Jackson Road (A spokeswoma­n for the city said it has received no requests to change the street name.)

Johanna Lopez, the Orange County School Board member in whose district the middle school sits, said she’s heard from a number of constituen­ts who want a completely new name.

“They feel very upset,” Lopez said. “They don’t feel comfortabl­e with the name, and they don’t feel comfortabl­e with the process.”

School Board policy says that in renaming a school, the superinten­dent is to present two options to the school board, the current name and a new one. Typically, the new suggestion is one recommende­d by the school advisory council.

But Lopez questioned whether the shortened Jackson Middle could even count as a new name and noted the school board, though it considers community views, has final say on school names.

She expects the Stonewall Jackson issue to be taken up in January or February.

The school advisory council

surveyed the community twice about the Stonewall Jackson name. The first survey in 2018 asked respondent­s if they wanted to get rid of the name, and nearly 47% said yes, 43.5% said no and about 10% had no opinion.

About 2,000 people filled out that survey. Of those who wanted a new name, 54% said no to using just Jackson.

A second survey, done earlier this year, offered five different name options, one of them Jackson Middle School. The others were Engelwood, Journey, La Costa or Semoran middle schools, most of which referenced places in the neighborho­od.

Jackson got about 64% of the votes, but far fewer people — 824 — took that second survey.

Lopez, a longtime Spanish teacher at nearby Colonial High School, is the first Latina and the first person from Puerto Rico elected to the Orange school board. She said she wasn’t sure whether those who filled out the survey, 65% of them students, understood the name’s history.

“The community was not informed or educated on who was Stonewall Jackson,” she said.

Historians say white-run school boards in the South gave schools confederat­e leader names starting in the mid-1950s as a way to express displeasur­e with the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark 1954 Brown v. board of education decision striking down school segregatio­n. A 1964 Orlando

Sentinel story showed the school board also considered naming the school after Jefferson Davis, the president of the confederac­y.

Jackson was a Virginian who died after a Civil War battle in that state in 1863.

Rolando Sanz-Guerrero, the advisory council’s chairman, said after the council’s October vote that those who wanted the Jackson name minus Stonewall — they won 10 to 3 — viewed it as a generic choice without ties to the southern Civil War leader. It would formalize what many already called the school and avoid the expense of redoing sports uniforms, school stationary and the like, Sanz-Guerrero said.

But since then others have voiced opposition.

“It’s just appalling. A Band aid approach to just take the first name off the name, as if Jackson wasn’t connected to the name,” said Marcos Vilar, executive director of Alianza for Progress, a group working to boost Puerto Rican and Latino involvemen­t in civic issues. “That’s a cop-out.”

He would like the school board to consider naming the school after a notable Hispanic as none of the Orange school district’s 200 campuses have such a moniker.

“We’re going to continue to push the school board to make the right decision,” Vilar added.

Rodriguez said he’s convinced a full name change for the school is inevitable, even if it doesn’t happen in the coming year.

“The Confederac­y is dead,” he said. “That name is dead.”

“It’s just appalling. A Band aid approach to just take the first name off the name, as if Jackson wasn’t connected to the name. That’s a cop-out.” —Marcos Vilar, executive director of Alianza for Progress

 ?? RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? The Rev. Jose Rodriguez is an advocate for renaming Stonewall Jackson Middle School.
RICARDO RAMIREZ BUXEDA/ORLANDO SENTINEL The Rev. Jose Rodriguez is an advocate for renaming Stonewall Jackson Middle School.

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