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70sEraVet

(4,235 posts)
Sun Oct 3, 2021, 07:21 PM Oct 2021

We weren't taught about the history of segregation, and it shows.

I'm in my late 60's, white, college educated, raised in the Northeast. I discovered in the last few months that I know NOTHING about the history of segregation in the South.

My awakening came about because my wife and I moved to a VERY small town in a rural Tennessee county. One of the first townspeople to befriend us was a black gentleman about the same age I am. I'll call him 'Daniel' for the sake of anonymity. Daniel is proficient in an absurd variety of skills, and will drop anything he's doing for a chance to help a neighbor. Which I am very thankful for, because I'm an inept but determined do-it-yourself'er.

I noticed a poor, decrepit little wooden building next to a small cemetery on the outskirts of the town proper, that looked like an old one-room schoolhouse. There was even a wooden outhouse still standing in the woods behind the school. I assumed that the schoolhouse was a relic from the depression era, that just by chance was still standing. So I asked Daniel about it.

It turns out, it WAS a one-room schoolhouse, built in the 1920's, for the local black children grades 1-8. And, DANIEL WENT TO THAT SCHOOL!

Up until 1965, while the local white children went to a nice, brightly lit school, where there was a lunchroom, a gymnasium, a teacher for each age group, and indoor plumbing, my friend Daniel went to a school just two streets over, that had 30-35 children ages 6-14 taught by ONE teacher, two out-houses (one for girls, one for boys), and books that were hand-me-downs from the white school.

Desegregation came just in time for Daniel to start high school in the white school. But I learned that the black TEACHERS were not integrated; it would have upset the racial hierarchy too much to have white students taught by a black teacher.

God forgive me, I honestly thought that before desegregation, that the schools were somewhat EQUAL! Why wasn't I taught about that?

https://postimg.cc/8J18Z4Zt

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SheilaAnn

(10,212 posts)
1. Was having a similar discussion with some folks on another board and there was a great article on
Sun Oct 3, 2021, 07:36 PM
Oct 2021

Uncle Tom's Cabin. I remember being taught very briefly about Tom but honestly it was covered in about 15 minutes and I don't recall any more discussion about him. This article went in depth and was so interesting. I missed it. Black Life was not taught in my school (NJ) and I think it certainly has contributed to the problems today.

SCantiGOP

(14,302 posts)
2. Best explanation I've heard of Critical Race Theory
Sun Oct 3, 2021, 08:40 PM
Oct 2021

The grandchildren of the people that tried to prevent a black girl from going to school in 1957 don’t want to hear that people tried to stop a black girl from going to school in 1957.

Walleye

(36,390 posts)
3. Didn't have to be in the deep South.We had the same kind of segregation here in Delaware before 1960
Sun Oct 3, 2021, 08:51 PM
Oct 2021
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