Conversation with Historian Edwin B Henderson
UNEQUAL OPPORTUNITY GUEST
Edwin B. Henderson, II was born in Tuskegee Institute, Alabama, attended the Laboratory School there, then attended Boggs Academy in Georgia for high school. Returning to Tuskegee, Mr. Henderson received a bachelor’s degree in history, and then moved to California to study photography and television engineering. Moving back to the East Coast, receiving a graduate assistanceship in Tuskegee University’s School of Education and received a Master of Counseling and Student Services.
Upon completion of grad school, he then moved to Falls Church, Virginia to take possession of his Grandparents home, which is now on the City of Falls Church and the Virginia state registry of historic places. In 1994, Mr. Henderson received a fellowship with the International Foundation for Education and Self-Help’s “Teachers for Africa Program” and was placed at the United States International University In Nairobi, Kenya. He has been an educator for twenty-five years, retiring from Fairfax County Public School’s in 2010.
In Falls Church, Mr. Henderson found that the history of the establishment of the first rural branch of the NAACP in the nation was only one of the many African American stories that were no longer a part of the narrative in Falls Church, Virginia. Therefore, Henderson and others founded the Tinner Hill Heritage Foundation, Inc., a non-profit public organization whose mission is to promote awareness of African American history and Northern Virginia’s civil rights pioneers, through the preservation of sacred places within that community. He is also co-founder of Henderson House, Inc, a non-profit organization whose mission is to preserve the home of Edwin B. and Mary Ellen Henderson, as well as their historical and archival properties.