Model Schools in the Model City: Race, Planning, and Education in the Nation's Capital

Amber N. Wiley
University of Pittsburgh Press

Model Schools in the Model City chronicles how Black Washingtonians used public education as a means of racial uplift in the face of entrenched white resistance and repeated assertions of white supremacy. For Black Washingtonians, it was the school building—a permanent structure, made of sturdy material—that was the physical realization of Black liberation, agency, and the right to exist as citizens of the United States. Furthermore, it was the school building that stood as the litmus test to whether Black Washingtonians’ citizenship was perpetually guaranteed; thus, they fought with all the tools at their disposal to maintain access to quality education in the nation’s capital.

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The Rediscovery of George "Nash" Walker: The Price of Black Stardom in Jim Crow America