Opening a School Named for the Organizer of the Library Sit-In of 1939
We ask Cathy David, who led the opening of the school in 2000, how she learned about the school’s namesake and the library sit-in of 1939.
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We ask Cathy David, who led the opening of the school in 2000, how she learned about the school’s namesake and the library sit-in of 1939.
We ask Michael Johnson, a cousin of a participant in the 1939 library sit-in, about growing up in a segregated city.
We ask Bryan Porter how he investigated the 1939 sit-in arrests and wrote an order clearing the participants.
We ask Justin Wilson about the process of learning about and clearing the charges in the 1939 Alexandria Library sit-in.
We ask Davis about her decades of work supporting research on the 1939 sit-in and interpreting its significance.
We ask Dawson, the first African American library director in Alexandria, about the 1939 sit-in and how libraries reckon with their pasts.
We ask what propelled Mitchell-Powell to document this little-known story and what lessons apply to schools and libraries today.
Delving into the story of the Alexandria Library sit-in, how its story has been preserved and amplified, and what it teaches us today.
The LSX model has the potential to foster the innovation needed in this new age鈥攁 model that could work beyond the realms of education.
In the second part in our series, we describe the context behind bringing a fuller picture of America’s story to classrooms.