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The School on the Hill

Achieving a vision for the future while respecting the past

FEBRUARY 2021

From left, Millicent Nash, Lorenzo Megginson and Delores Nash-Hicks at the Campbell County Training School Complex. (Photo By: Laura Emery)

by Steven Johnson, Staff Writer

After more than 60 years, Delores Nash-Hicks was back in fourth grade, and she could not have been more delighted.

Her old classroom in the Campbell County Training School Complex looked almost new, with freshly painted walls, gleaming hardwood floors and high-banked, reglazed windows that bathed photographs and mementos in natural light.

Her memories were just as fresh. Departing before dawn on the long bus ride that would take her from the tiny community of New London, Va., to the school, set aside for Black education in the Jim Crow era. How students lined up to march through her classroom to the lunchroom to take once-a-year health pills. Walking up the hill to the privy. The woodstove that provided heat. The love of the teachers.

“I can’t explain it. It’s exhilarating. It’s happiness,” she says.

Nash-Hicks was returning to class — she’d swept the floor earlier in the day, like a dutiful student — as part of an ambitious, multi-year, multimillion-dollar effort to restore four buildings known as the School on the Hill in Rustburg, just outside of Lynchburg.

Built in the 1920s and 1930s, the structures are still-standing keepsakes of an initiative conceived by Booker T. Washington and philanthropist Julius Rosenwald to construct some 5,300 schools supported, partially financed, maintained and staffed by Black communities.

For Black students across the South, Rosenwald schools often represented the sole opportunity for education beyond sixth grade, emphasizing trades for males and domestic arts for females.

A century later, project organizers envision the school as a cultural, educational and historical facility. They foresee a variety of practical workshops and training, while incubator space will be available for startup businesses. A renovated assembly hall will host plays, concerts, lectures and other activities. A museum that tells the Rosenwald story is in progress.

“Those things from the past are very important,” says Millicent Nash, president of the restoration project and a former student at the school. “But those things that we continue to work for are just as important.”

Some of the work has already started on renovating the nearly century-old Campbell County Training School. (Photo By: Laura Emery)

FORESIGHT OF SLAVES

Though he was born into slavery — and perhaps because of it — Thomas Tweedy had a vision of education. In the early 1920s, Tweedy and Gabe Hunt, another former slave, mortgaged their homes to come up with the match required for a Rosenwald school in Rustburg. The simple, four-classroom, four-teacher building cost $7,500 — the Rosenwald fund contributed $1,100, the community contribution was $800, with the Campbell County School Board accounting for the rest.

Two years later, the school board spent $200 to hire Tweedy as what it described as a “colored agricultural demonstration agent.” He later became the school’s first principal, in all spending a half-century in education.

By 1928, 16 Rosenwald schools had sprung up across Campbell County’s more than 500 square miles with African American communities raising nearly $5,800 toward construction, according to data compiled by the National Park Service.

In every case, the school was more than a wood frame for rote learning, says the Rev. Allan Loving. He attended Leets School, a functional two-room building in the northern tip of the county, where several boys would light a fire in the woodstove for heat every morning while others walked a half-mile to a nearby spring to retrieve water for the school day.

“It was the center point of the community. We would have our picnics and games and sometimes we would have lectures there from various officials in the county,” he says. “We loved the school because it was an opportunity to get off that tobacco farm.”

In the meantime, the school in Rustburg was expanding into the hub of the local Rosenwald network. The fund helped to finance a three-teacher annex, with a 5,000-square-foot auditorium coming to fruition around 1931.

Eventually, the school complex consisted of seven buildings, including a two-room home economics cottage and a dormitory for teachers where Principal Clyde Scott resided. Four buildings remain today, and they are the focus of the renovation project.

“We are achievers,” Millicent Nash says. “And our part is to show our young people that they can be achievers as well. They’ve got that capability to become achievers.”

FOR THE LOVE OF LEARNING

The Black schools lacked what white public schools had. Student Sonja Dickerson recalls that parents organized festivals to raise funds for a simple overhead projector. Not until 1969, 15 years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled separate educational facilities were inherently unequal, did Campbell County schools fully integrate.

Delores Nash-Hicks points to the historic display that is featured in the building where she attended fourth grade. (Photo By: Laura Emery)

Yet, with the strong support system in school and at home, students from Campbell County look back on their education with fondness, not regret.

Case in point: Teachers used what resources they had at their disposal, even negative ones, to channel their students into productive ways of thinking. Maurice Darden attended a Rosenwald school in nearby Southampton County, Va., and recalls slurs scribbled in the pages of old textbooks that white schools turned over to Black schools.

“Our teacher would want you to read the message, and it was a racial message because that’s the way he wanted to get you more motivated. You had to read whatever that message was and then you had to think about it, then he would quiz you,” Darden says. “The only reason we survived was because the teachers loved us.”

Corrinne Kinebrew, who attended assemblies at the training school, said her experience in Campbell County convinced her that education is more than just an overstocked supply cabinet.

“Resources are not education,” she says. “When a person learns to read, write and reason, there is no limit to what they can do. There was a systemic effort to limit resources so that people would not learn to read, write and reason, because once you learn to do that, there’s very little that presents a challenge. And that has to do more with the community that you’re a part of.”

Millicent Nash heads the committee overseeing restoration of a Black-only school she and her parents attended. (Photo By: Laura Emery)

Campbell County students did not progress at equal rates. There are no official dropout statistics, but Loving remembers farmers driving to school in their pickups to retrieve boys for work in the fields. Many of them were part of sharecropper families and never returned for an education, he says.

“Those boys usually missed the first semester of the year because they had to help the father with the crops and so forth. The sharecropper, he could be fired because that’s the way he fed his family,” he says. “So it was survival. We were in survival mode.”

Even so, the memories of a first-class education for citizens treated mostly as second class are positive. Like her parents, Millicent Nash attended the training school and, as she walks through the buildings today, she can point out where she hung her coat as a first-grader and laid her head for an after-lunch nap.

“I felt we received a first-class education that allowed us to go on further,” she says. “Our job as young people was to go to school, get the best grades we could and do everything expected of us, and that was to learn.”

THE ONCE AND FUTURE SCHOOL

Inside the one-time training school auditorium, under freshly mounted crossbeams and dangling wires, Lorenzo Megginson was poring over blueprints. The four buildings on the grounds are well preserved, considering they are nearly 100 years old. But codes are more aggressive than they were in the 1920s and 1930s, and as a project manager, Megginson is navigating them during construction.

Lorenzo Megginson reviews building plans. (Photo By: Laura Emery)

“They didn’t have the ADA [Americans with Disabilities Act]. You’ve got to meet all of these standards,” he says. “It’s a lot that you didn’t have to worry about years ago.”

Megginson was born into the Rosenwald heritage. A Campbell County Rosenwald school is named for his great-grandfather, Albert; it has since been annexed into the city of Lynchburg. He thought he was retired as a masonry specialist in 2010 until he hooked on with the renovation.

“Our goal was to get something done that was physical and visible. So we had to gut out the entire [auditorium] building one side at a time. I am retired but I have a full-time job,” he laughs. “I don’t know how I had time to work when I was working.”

After the U.S. Supreme Court’s Brown v. Board of Education decision, the training school was phased out, replaced by consolidated segregated schools. When the school system returned it to the county as surplus property, the board of supervisors directed the county administrator’s office to work with the local branch of NAACP to evaluate the property’s significance and value to the African American community.

In 2014, the NAACP developed an ad hoc committee to research the matter. It determined that the school was a historic Rosenwald school. The ad hoc committee became a legal entity intending to restore and develop the property for public use, and the county deeded the property to the Campbell County Training School Complex Committee in 2016.

Delores Nash-Hicks

When Nash-Hicks learned of the restoration committee, she jumped in with both feet to preserve a school that her mother and her seven brothers and sisters also attended. A former school system employee, she specializes in community history presentations and is the project’s historical archivist.

“The joke I tell everybody is they’re going to have to hurry up and finish so I can get married there and have my wedding reception,” she laughs.

Fundraisers and grants are helping to move the volunteer work along. Support has come from the Fray Family Trust and the Jamerson Family Trust.

Other support has come from the Greater Lynchburg Community Foundation and the National Trust for Historic Preservation, as well as continuous backing from the Campbell County administration and community partners.

The committee is working with Virginia Tech to finalize a conceptual site plan. In that way, Millicent Nash says the committee is fostering a more educated citizenry and working with community-based organizations — a modern version of what Washington and Rosenwald fought for 100 years ago.

“As we move into a different era, we want to cast a vision for the future,” she says. “It’s going to be phenomenal.”

For more information, visit campbellcountytrainingschoolcomplex.org.