[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 30 (Thursday, February 25, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H897-H898]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HISTORIC ROSENWALD SCHOOLS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Arkansas (Mr. Hill) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HILL. Mr. Speaker, for recently freed African Americans,
education denied to them under slavery was a critical component of
understanding freedom.
In the wake of the Civil War, with the widespread awareness that
education was essential to the advancement of a free people in this
society, African Americans flocked to schools established by the
Freedmen's Bureau.
The recognition of this relationship between schools, community, and
the broader ideal of the American Dream led African American parents
and teachers to be among the first Southerners to advocate for
universal public education.
However, the dual education system that arose, determined by race and
based on the fiction of separate but equal, brought about a hand-me-
down approach to Black education in the South. This flawed duality
resulted in the perpetuation and exacerbation of institutional
inequity.
In the face of such obstacles, leaders like Booker T. Washington,
founder of the Tuskegee Institute, embraced and expanded on the early
belief in education as the great hope of a truly democratic society.
Washington's vision inspired many, including philanthropist and
president of Sears, Roebuck, Julius Rosenwald.
The philanthropic and educational partnership between these two men
led to the construction of 5,000 Rosenwald schools across 15 Southern
States. In Arkansas, 389 school buildings were constructed in 45 of our
75 counties, with communities pooling their often meager resources to
fulfill Rosenwald's pledge to match their contribution.
For many, these buildings were not simply schools but monuments to
Black achievement and symbols for an ardent hope in a better future.
Rosenwald schools contributed to the education of thousands of African
American students across the American
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South, including notable figures like Arkansas poet Maya Angelou and
our own esteemed colleague and friend, the gentleman from Georgia (Mr.
Lewis).
In 1954, with the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of
Education, to which Julius Rosenwald contributed one-third of the
litigation costs, his carefully crafted schools became obsolete. In
Arkansas, the tensions behind this great achievement played out in the
tumultuous 1957 Little Rock Central High crisis. The courageous
determination of the Little Rock Nine hearkens back to that fundamental
belief in education equals freedom.
This is the continuing legacy of Washington, of Rosenwald, and the
countless parents and teachers who were determined to give future
generations the means of mobility, economic advancement, opportunity.
In 2002, the National Trust for Historic Preservation listed
Rosenwald schools as one of America's most 11 endangered places. Today
in Arkansas, only 18 of those original school buildings remain. One of
those remaining buildings is in the Second Congressional District. The
only Rosenwald school to be built in Perry County, the Bigelow
Rosenwald School, was constructed in 1926.
After 38 years of service toward education, the Bigelow Rosenwald
School was transformed into a community center. With a revival of
interest in and knowledge about the schools, efforts are being formed
around the country to restore these embodiments of our history.
Aviva Kempner's documentary ``Rosenwald'' pays tribute to the man,
his work, and the rippling impact on the evolution of African American
education in our country.
As we celebrate Black History Month, I rise to recognize how far we
have come, how far we still must traverse, and pay a special salute to
Julius Rosenwald and his contributions to the advancement of education.
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