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Another name change? Albemarle school board confronts racist past

“White parents would not permit their children to receive instruction from inferior Negro teachers—and they were inferior.”

These recently resurfaced words, which originally appeared in a July 1, 1956, article titled “Virginia’s Creeping Desegregation: Force of the Inevitable” in Commentary Magazine, were said by Dr. Paul Cale, the longest-serving Albemarle County schools superintendent, and the namesake of one of the county’s most diverse elementary schools.

And now that his racist murmurings have been brought to light, some school board members say celebrating the long-gone superintendent doesn’t sit well with them.

“The author writes of Dr. Cale’s agreement that two years after Brown vs. the Board of Education, integration was not practical in Albemarle County and if it were to be enforced, white parents would withdraw their children and stop paying taxes,” said school board chair Kate Acuff October 18 at the board’s most recent meeting. “This was the essential strategy of massive resistance, which was formally born in Virginia only months before this article appeared.”

In a motion that wasn’t on the meeting’s agenda, she called for superintendent Matt Haas to review the current policy on naming school buildings and to review the monikers of all schools in the division, including Cale Elementary School, within six months.

“We should not revere or celebrate these viewpoints nor preserve them in perpetuity in the names of public buildings,” Acuff said. “As this board often has said, in this school division, all should always mean all.”

Local filmmaker Lorenzo Dickerson, who also serves as a web and social media specialist for county schools, says he dug up the Commentary article when creating a presentation for a professional development day for teachers and administrators at his alma mater, Western Albemarle High School. He showed his work to the school board at Acuff’s request.

Dickerson has also directed a film called Albemarle’s Black Classrooms, and focuses his work on telling stories of local African-American history. He’s spent years researching the themes in his name-change prompting presentation.

What surprised me the most was a photo of a black-faced minstrel show that was given at Albemarle High School during the 1962-63 school year,” he says. “I found this photo in the AHS yearbook from that year. It was displayed just as any other typical school play.”

These types of discussions aren’t new to Albemarle. The county school board has recently come under fire by anti-racist activists for its dress code, which allows Confederate imagery. These community members, some with the Anti-Hate Coalition of Albemarle County, considered the most recent meeting a “huge win,” according to the group’s Facebook page.

“I know that the members of this board will continue to struggle with these issues,” said David Oberg, one school board member who has publicly supported the ban on hate symbols in schools. “I hope that as we do, we will engage our entire community on not only the issue of Confederate imagery, but also the issues of systemic discrimination within our schools and within our community.”

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Getting personal with Lorenzo Dickerson

Local filmmaker, age 35

Though he only began teaching himself the art of filmmaking four years ago while researching his ancestry, Lorenzo Dickerson’s calling has always been storytelling.

“I enjoy bringing awareness to stories that either have been forgotten or that people have never known about,” says Dickerson about his films. “That’s really where my passion is and what I like to do for the local area—make people aware of the rich history of what’s happened here.”

A member of Western Albemarle High School’s class of 1999, Dickerson pursued a master’s degree in marketing at Strayer University in Herndon. By day, he is currently the web content and social media manager for the Albemarle County Public Schools system. His background lies in figuring out the right story to tell, whether in his day job or in his documentary films, which explore local African-American history.

Dickerson’s fourth film, Albemarle’s Black Classrooms, which premieres this weekend at the Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, details the history of education for African-Americans in Albemarle County from 1910 to the present, including massive resistance to desegregation in local schools. He speaks with alumni from Burley High School, which combined Jefferson and Esmont high schools and Albemarle Training School into a single high school for black students in the area in 1951. Jackson P. Burley Middle School now stands on the school’s site on Rose Hill Drive.

“The film talks a bit about how schools can sometimes become resegregated due to [white] students leaving public schools to go to private schools,” he says. “The purpose of the film is to bring awareness to the history behind these schools, the people who went there and what they endured during that time.”

His 2016 documentary, Anywhere But Here, a compilation of interviews with African-American male inmates at the Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail, was shown at last year’s Virginia Film Festival. And The Color Line of Scrimmage tells the story of the undefeated 1956 football team at segregated Burley High School.

“I’m changing because I’m learning a lot more about the local area and the people who are here,” he says. “It wasn’t taught in schools.”

SHOW TIME: The February 25 premiere of Albemarle’s Black Schools is sold out, but a second showing will take place February 26. Go to maupintown.com for ticket information.

Lorenzo Dickerson’s top five films:

  • Driving Miss Daisy
  • Pride and Prejudice
  • The Help
  • Hidden Figures
  • Slavery and the Making of America