Graymont Elementary School: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Graymont School integration.png|right|thumb|275px|A mother withdraws her son from school on September 10, 1963. UPI photo]]
[[Image:Graymont School integration.png|right|thumb|275px|A mother withdraws her son from school on September 10, 1963. UPI photo]]
'''Graymont Elementary School''' is a former elementary school in the [[Birmingham City Schools]] system. It was located at 300 [[8th Avenue West]] in the [[Graymont]] neighborhood. It was first opened in [[1901]] with additions completed to designs by [[Willam Spink]] in [[1908]].
'''Graymont Elementary School''' is a former elementary school in the [[Birmingham City Schools]] system. It was located at 300 [[8th Avenue West]] in the [[Graymont neighborhood]].
 
The school was first opened in [[1908]] as a project of the then independent [[Town of Graymont]]. It was constructed in a classical style designed by [[Willam Spink]].


Graymont was the first school in the Birmingham system to be integrated when [[James Armstrong]], who had prevailed in his lawsuit, ''[[Armstrong v. Birmingham Board of Education]]'', saw his sons [[Dwight Armstrong|Dwight]] and [[Floyd Armstrong|Floyd]] enter school under on [[September 10]], a day after they had been turned away from the door.
Graymont was the first school in the Birmingham system to be integrated when [[James Armstrong]], who had prevailed in his lawsuit, ''[[Armstrong v. Birmingham Board of Education]]'', saw his sons [[Dwight Armstrong|Dwight]] and [[Floyd Armstrong|Floyd]] enter school under on [[September 10]], a day after they had been turned away from the door.
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[[Category:Former Birmingham schools]]
[[Category:Former Birmingham schools]]
[[Category:8th Avenue West]]
[[Category:8th Avenue West]]
[[Category:1901 buildings]]
[[Category:1908 buildings]]
[[Category:William Spink buildings]]
[[Category:William Spink buildings]]
[[Category:1901 establishments]]
[[Category:1908 establishments]]
[[Category:1989 disestablishments]]
[[Category:1989 disestablishments]]
[[Category:Civil rights landmarks]]
[[Category:Civil rights landmarks]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places]]
[[Category:National Register of Historic Places]]

Revision as of 16:25, 15 August 2017

A mother withdraws her son from school on September 10, 1963. UPI photo

Graymont Elementary School is a former elementary school in the Birmingham City Schools system. It was located at 300 8th Avenue West in the Graymont neighborhood.

The school was first opened in 1908 as a project of the then independent Town of Graymont. It was constructed in a classical style designed by Willam Spink.

Graymont was the first school in the Birmingham system to be integrated when James Armstrong, who had prevailed in his lawsuit, Armstrong v. Birmingham Board of Education, saw his sons Dwight and Floyd enter school under on September 10, a day after they had been turned away from the door.

After integration, Graymont Elementary became largely redundant to Hill Elementary School, which had been reconstructed in the 1950s. It closed in 1989.

In the mid 1990s, the vacant former school was restored and adapted for the offices of the Jefferson County Committee for Economic Opportunity (JCCEO), which operates federally-funded social programs such as pre-kindergarten, adult day care, substance abuse, nutrition, utility assistance, job training, residential weatherization, and family counseling. JCCEO also operates the Arrington Head Start Center, home of Alabama's first public pre-K classroom, from Graymont

In 2007 the Graymont School was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

Principals

References

  • "Graymont School takes rank with leaders of city in writing and sportsmanship." (August 12, 1928) The Birmingham News/Birmingham Post-Herald joint edition
  • Nelson, Linda (December 6, 2006) "Graymont School". National Register of Historic Places Registration Form, enrolled August 16, 2007
  • "JCCEO Celebrates 100th Anniversary and Historic Designation of the Graymont School Building" (Winter 2009) Action News. Community Action Association of Alabama, p. 5