Prince Edward County Public Schools

Prince Edward County Public Schools (HMKYO)

Location: Farmville, VA 23901 Prince Edward County
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Country: United States of America
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N 37° 15.928', W 78° 23.946'

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Farmville, Virginia

— Prince Edward County —

In 1954, after the Supreme Court ruled in Brown vs. the Board of Education of Topeka, that United States schools must integrate, Senator Harry S. Byrd and several Virginia governors followed the policy of "massive resistance." Integration was postponed in every way it could be, from legal manipulation to simple foot-dragging. In many counties the Boards of Supervisors, School Boards and other government bodies managed to postpone integration for as long as 15 years. In Prince Edward County the governing bodies simply closed the schools altogether from 1959-64, rather than comply with the mandate to integrate. White children could attend the newly established Prince Edward Academy. However, many white families couldn't afford or did not feel it was necessary to go to the Academy, and their children received no education. For black children a number of "training schools" were set up in churches, homes and buildings to provide them with a rudimentary education.

They were often taught by unpaid, untrained teachers, as salaried teachers went elsewhere looking for work. An organized effort led by Farmville's First Baptist and Beulah churches resulted in "Free Schools," in which student volunteers came to town to teach and live with local black families. In other cases, many children—black and white were sent by their parents to live in other counties with friends or relatives to get an education. Others remained working on farms, expecting that the situation would not last longer than a year or so. As a result, many of Prince Edward's youth were denied years of education during the Civil Rights movement. The "Lost Generation," as they have been called, received an education that was interrupted for a few important years or never completed. After the schools reopened in 1964, extensive improvements gradually resulted in a 135-acre campus with three schools that provide the county's diverse student population with a quality education.
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HM NumberHMKYO
Tags
Marker Number23
Placed ByCivil Rights in Education Heritage Trail?
Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Saturday, September 20th, 2014 at 3:20pm PDT -07:00
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Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)17S E 730632 N 4127493
Decimal Degrees37.26546667, -78.39910000
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 37° 15.928', W 78° 23.946'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds37° 15' 55.68" N, 78° 23' 56.76" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Area Code(s)434
Closest Postal AddressAt or near 1328 Zion Hill Rd, Farmville VA 23901, US
Alternative Maps Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps, Yahoo Maps, MSR Maps, OpenCycleMap, MyTopo Maps, OpenStreetMap

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