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Religion

Texas Historical Marker

Booker T. Washington School

Following emancipation, African Americans formed communities along with churches, cemeteries and schools. The first school for African Americans in Elysian Fields was the Elysian Fields Colored School, a two-room building constructed in 1870. The importance of education for their children was a cornerstone of the community. For 41 years, the school offered elementary and high school-level curriculum. The first teachers were a Mr. Durant (1871-1878) and Jordan Williams (1890-1893). In 1910, the entire community of Elysian Fields elected to move closer to the newly-established Marshall and East Texas Railway. In 1911, the colored school was moved to the current site of the Elysian Fields Elementary School. In the late 1940s, several rural schools for the surrounding African American communities consolidated with Elysian Fields Colored School and operated under the elysian fields county line rural school system until 1954. On March 5, 1954, the Elysian Fields School Board renamed the school the Booker T. Washington School, in honor of the influential educator and founder of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute (now Tuskegee University). In addition to academic programs, the school also offered sports, including football and boys and girls basketball. in 1970, the 100th anniversary of the establishment of the Elysian Fields Colored School, all schools within the district were integrated. The school district then converted the Booker T. Washington School into the Elysian Fields Elementary School. (2017)

African American topics; educational topics

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1 Peter Whetstone Square, Marshall, TX 75670, USA

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