Fantastic Footnotes Podcast
The sleepy little suburb of Merriam, Kansas actually has quite a history. This little suburb of Kansas City has hosted two historic amusement parks (one was George Kessler’s first project), an early Quaker mission, was the site of a plane crash in WWII and a spur of the Santa Fe Trail in the 1800’s, and was on the leading edge in the fight for school desegregation. In the early 1860s, David Gee Campbell settled in the area and named the town, now Merriam, Campbellton. Many Shawnee Indians were already settled in the same area, having been given 200 acres of land each in a deal signed by President Cleveland. Unfortunately, by 1863 much of the land was being auctioned off for unpaid taxes, and Rufus Benson purchased about 400 acres of it which he used to build the community of South Park, just north of Merriam. (Later, parts of South Park were annexed by Merriam.) In 1888 the community of South Park built the Madame C.J. Walker School, named after Madam C. J. Walker, the first self-made female millionaire in America. If you want to know more about her, check out this episode from The History Chicks [https://thehistorychicks.com/episode-67-madam-cj-walker/]. The school was attended by both black and white students until around 1900, when white students started attending a separate school. In 1947 the school district opened South Park Elementary School, paid for by ALL taxpayers, but open only to white students. At this point, the C.J. Walker School was nearly 60 years old, had no running water, indoor restrooms, or electricity, and was starting to fall apart. The new South Park School had all of these amenities. Unsurprisingly, black families in the area were unhappy. They voiced their concerns to the school district, but their complaints fell on deaf ears. Helen Swan lived in South Park and worked for a family in Merriam. One afternoon, as her employer, Esther Brown, drove Helen home, Helen shared the problems black families were facing with the school district. As a Jewish woman living in the aftermath of WWII, Esther could not stand by and allow the injustice to continue. Esther, along with the Webb family and other community members, started organizing. They organized Walker’s Walkout, a boycott of the school district. During the walkout, Hazel McCray-Weddington and Corinthian Nutter taught Black students in people’s homes so the children could continue their education. The group also started an NAACP chapter and continued engaging with the school district in hopes of getting something done. And the school district did offer to help… either build a new school for the black students once the bond was paid off (at least 30 years later), or install a mailbox and stop sign at the Walker School. Not exactly helpful. Esther herself faced threats for helping black families. People at the grocery store would casually mention that the KKK was still active in the area, and she even had an FBI file opened on her during the McCarthy era. So, in May of 1948, Webb v. School District No. 90 was filed with the Kansas Supreme Court, and in June of 1949 the court ruled in favor of Webb. The district needed to provide equal facilities for all students, so black students were allowed to attend South Park School. The main lawyer in the case was Elisha Scott, though Thurgood Marshall helped write briefs for the case as well. After the ruling, Esther Brown stayed active in the movement and was sent first to Wichita and then Topeka, where she helped with the famous Brown v. Board of Education case that we all know today. Today, the old Walker School building is home to Philadelphia Missionary Baptist Church. Across the street sits Brown Park, named in honor of Esther Brown and designed by Alfonzo Webb Jr., the son of the plaintiff in the case, Alfonzo Webb. The church is currently working to renovate the historic school building and build a museum dedicated to this important history. If you would like to help, you can donate through the church’s fundraising page [https://www.givelify.com/donate/philadelphia-missionary-baptist-church-merriam-ks-2j7wy5MTUxMTA2NQ==/donation/amount]. After selecting your gift amount, choose “Project Revive and Restore” to ensure your donation goes to the C.J. Walker School Fund. You can also follow their progress on Facebook. [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61575767934529] Sources: https://aaregistry.org/story/webb-v-school-district-no-90-is-decided/ https://www.merriam.org/Residents/Our-Community/About-Merriam/History-of-Merriam https://www.humanitieskansas.org/get-involved/kansas-stories/places/before-brown-madam-c-j-walker-school-and-desegregation https://www.kcur.org/history/2024-05-15/brown-v-board-kansas-city-school-segregation-walker-walkout Book: Jenks, Myra F and Irene B. French, Historic Merriam: The History of Merriam, Kansas, Publishing Specialists, Inc, 2006 This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit fantasticfootnotes.substack.com [https://fantasticfootnotes.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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