Current:Home > reviewsVirginia NAACP sues school board for reinstating Confederate names -GrowthInsight
Virginia NAACP sues school board for reinstating Confederate names
View
Date:2025-04-13 19:46:27
The Virginia NAACP sued a county school board Tuesday over its reinstatement of Confederate military names to two schools, accusing it of embracing segregationist values and subjecting Black students to a racially discriminatory educational environment.
The school board in Shenandoah County voted 5-1 last month to revert the name of Mountain View High School back to Stonewall Jackson High School, and that of Honey Run Elementary to Ashby Lee Elementary. The vote reversed a 2020 decision to remove the original names against a backdrop of nationwide protests over racial injustice.
The federal lawsuit states that Black students compose less than 3% of the school system’s population. Plaintiffs include five students — identified by their initials and described as Black, white and biracial — and their parents.
The Associated Press sent an email seeking comment to school board chair Dennis C. Barlow.
The NAACP wrote that students will be “required against their will to endorse the violent defense of slavery pursued by the Confederacy and the symbolism that these images have in the modern White supremacist movement.”
For example, the lawsuit said an incoming freshman, who is Black, would be forced to play sports as a member of the Stonewall Jackson “Generals.” And she would have to wear a uniform “adorned with a name and logo that symbolizes hatred, White supremacy, and Massive Resistance to integration.”
If the student doesn’t fully participate in school sports or other activities, she may miss out on future opportunities, including playing college sports, according to the lawsuit, which was filed in U.S. District Court in Harrisonburg.
The NAACP alleges that the Confederate school names violate the students’ First Amendment rights, which include the right “not to express a view with which a person disagrees.” It also cites the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, which “prohibits racial discrimination in state-supported institutions.”
The Southern Poverty Law Center’s Intelligence Project, which maintains a database of more than 2,000 Confederate memorials nationwide, was not aware of another case of a school system restoring a Confederate name that was removed, senior research analyst Rivka Maizlish said in May.
Overall, the trend of removing Confederate names and memorials has continued, even if it has slowed somewhat since 2020, she said, noting that the Army renamed nine installations named for Confederate leaders, and removed a Confederate memorial from Arlington National Cemetery.
The school board members in Shenandoah County who had voted in May to restore the Confederate names said they were honoring popular community sentiment. They said the previous board members who had removed the names in 2020 had ignored constituents and due process on the matter.
Elections in 2023 significantly changed the school board’s makeup, with one board member writing in an op-ed for the Northern Virginia Daily that the results gave Shenandoah County “the first 100% conservative board since anyone can remember.”
That board member, Gloria Carlineo, said during a board meeting in May that opponents of the Confederate names should “stop bringing racism and prejudice into everything” because it “detracts from true cases of racism.”
The lone board member to vote against restoring the Confederate names, Kyle Gutshall, said he respected both sides of the debate but believed a majority of residents in his district wanted to leave the Mountain View and Honey Run names in place.
“I don’t judge anybody or look down on anybody for the decision they’re making,” he said. “It’s a complex issue.”
During several hours of public comment, county residents spoke up on both sides of the issue.
Beth Ogle, a parent and longtime resident, said restoring the Confederate names is “a statement to the world that you do not value the dignity and respect of your minority students, faculty and staff.”
Kenny Wakeman, a lifelong county resident, said the Stonewall Jackson name “stood proudly for 60 years until 2020,” when he said the “actions of a rogue police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota,” prompted a move to change the name, a reference to the killing of George Floyd that sparked nationwide protests and debate over racial injustice.
Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson was a Confederate general from Virginia who gained fame at the First Battle of Bull Run near Manassas in 1861 and died in 1863 after he was shot and had his arm amputated. Jackson’s name was also removed from another high school in Virginia’s Prince William County in 2020. That school was renamed Unity Reed High School.
Ashby Lee is named for both Gen. Robert E. Lee, a Virginia native who commanded Confederate forces, and for Turner Ashby, a Confederate cavalry officer who was killed in battle in 1862 near Harrisonburg. A high school near Harrisonburg is also named for Ashby.
The resolution approved by the school board states that private donations would be used to pay for the name changes.
Shenandoah County, a largely rural jurisdiction with a population of about 45,000, roughly 100 miles (160 kilometers) west of Washington, D.C., has long been politically conservative. In 2020, Republican Donald Trump won 70% of the presidential vote in Shenandoah, even as Biden won Virginia by 10 points.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Best Christmas gift I ever received
- Stuck on holiday gifts? What happened when I used AI to help with Christmas shopping
- No, that 90% off sale is not legit. Here's how to spot scams and protect your cash
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Supreme Court to hear major case that could upend tax code and doom wealth tax proposals
- New North Carolina congressional districts challenged in federal court on racial bias claims
- Tokyo Olympics sullied by bid-rigging, bribery trials more than 2 years after the Games closed
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Photographs capture humpback whale’s Seattle visit, breaching in waters in front of Space Needle
Ranking
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- UN agency cites worrying warming trend as COP28 summit grapples with curbing climate change
- 11 hikers dead, 12 missing after Indonesia's Marapi volcano erupts
- Macaulay Culkin Shares What His and Brenda Song's Son Can't Stop Doing After His Public Debut
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- U.S. warship, commercial ships encounter drone and missile attacks in the Red Sea, officials say
- COP28 climate conference president Sultan al-Jaber draws more fire over comments on fossil fuels
- Republican leaders of Wisconsin Legislature at odds over withholding university pay raises
Recommendation
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
Suzanne Somers’ Husband Shares the Touching Reason She’s Laid to Rest in Timberland Boots
Cause sought of explosion that leveled an Arlington, Virginia, home as police tried to serve warrant
Coach Outlet’s Holiday Gift Guide Has the Perfect Gifts for Everyone on Your Nice List
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Tokyo Olympics sullied by bid-rigging, bribery trials more than 2 years after the Games closed
Ukrainian officials say Russian shelling has hit a southern city, killing 2 people in the street
4 killed, including a 1-year-old boy, in a shooting at a Dallas home