Monday, February 3, 2025

Notes on Little Central and the Colored School around 1870

It's Black History Month and Macy's is closing.

It's a good time to revisit the "Colored School" in Little Central located on the corner of Marion and High Streets, the north side of the Macy's block.

Little Central, home for "Colored School" on Marion at High
(Streetview in 2012, State Library inset)

There's nothing really new here, but maybe we can refine a few details.

In her recent book, The Rise and Fall of the Second American Republic: Reconstruction, 1860-1920, Manesha Sinha focuses on Black self-determination as she stresses bottom-up action in "grassroots Reconstruction" and "Black Reconstruction." On education she writes

In 1865, the Freedmen's Bureau ran 740 schools with 90,589 students and 1,314 teachers....This was a "drop in the bucket," though, as the Bureau received hundreds of applications for new schools from freedpeople....As a result of congressional appropriations during Reconstruction, the Bureau schools were put on a firmer footing. But the biggest driver of the educational success of the Bureau remained freedpeople themselves. By 1867, "colored pupils" were paying school tuition and freed people contributed considerably to the upkeep of freedmen's schools....Freedpeople's desire for education transcended age; many adults started "self-teaching." Freedpeople established their own schools in "cellars, sheds, or the corner of a negro meeting house"....

Our establishment histories haven't said much about the Colored School here, in part because little was known. As I read it, pretty much everything depends on and is a refinement of Sue Bell's 2002 piece in Historic Marion and later adapted for her Oregon Encyclopedia piece, "Salem's Colored School and Little Central."

The Salem Online History, now hosted at the Mill, discussed it in the context of Black History more generally.
In 1867, the African American community in Salem raised $427.50, which allowed them to operate a school for six months. They placed an announcement in the newspaper, saying that “Notice is hereby given that the colored people of Salem expect to pay all the expenses of the Evening School now being held by them, without aid from other citizens – no person is authorized to collect funds in our name.” The following year, the city of Salem continued what they had begun, and opened Little Central School. This segregated school was located near Central School on High Street between Center and Marion. Its fifteen minority students were taught by Marie Smith and Mrs. R. Mallory. Tuition at Little Central was $4 a term, the same that white children paid to attend “big” Central School.

And reference in the Mill's piece on Emancipation celebrations:

the African American community of Salem was renting a room in order to have a school that their children could attend, the city’s schools having barred their children entry (even though they were paying the taxes that supported the city’s school system).  Fed up, parents raised enough money to hire a teacher and rent a room to provide their children with an education.

Sinha's notes on history and self-determination suggest a broader reading of the Colored School as an expression of Reconstruction here in Salem. It was not just a local story but took place in that national context, and also would offer more evidence that Reconstruction was story for a much wider area than the South.

There is some evidence that locals understood it this broader way.

Sunday, February 2, 2025

Even Unruly, Protest on Foot not equal to Dangerous Motorized Street Takeover

Salem Police today sent out a weird release. Seemingly by design, it conflates a protest on foot, sometimes unruly, but not anything inherently dangerous with lethal force, and an inherently dangerous street takeover by cars and drivers drifting with lethal force.

From Salem PD:

Street takeover closes northeast Salem intersection Saturday night, five arrested

Salem, Ore. -- The intersection of Lancaster DR and Market ST NE was closed at about 8:45 p.m. on Saturday, February 1 after the area was taken over illegally by a crowd of people and vehicles.

At approximately 12:00 p.m., a crowd of people gathered in the parking lots of several businesses on the four corners of the intersection of Lancaster DR and Market ST NE. The group was demonstrating against national immigration enforcement efforts.

By 2:00 p.m., the group was estimated to have 300 participants. The gathered remained relatively peaceful, although traffic in the area was congested. As the event progressed, callers reported participants throwing objects and hitting passing cars.

Eventually, more police resources were called in to address the event.

Other reports were received at about 7:00 p.m. of participants standing in the crosswalk not allowing traffic to continue, fireworks being ignited, and vehicles driving recklessly. At this point further police resources were necessary, including calling in officers from home and requesting outside agency assistance.

At about 8:30 p.m., the intersection was overtaken by drivers performing burnouts and dangerously drifting and spinning in the roadway, and nearly 50 people occupying the street.

The intersection was closed shortly afterward with north and southbound Lancaster DR closed between D ST and Sunnyview RD, east and westbound Market ST was closed between Fisher RD and Tierra DR. Cherriots buses were rerouted. Oregon State Police temporarily closed the Market ST offramp.

As specialized crowd management officers from the Mobile Response Team (MRT) arrived, the group surrounded a vehicle on Lancaster DR blocking all northbound traffic. The officers cleared the area allowing the vehicle to proceed. The protestors threw water bottles and cans of beer at Salem Police vehicles.

MRT and patrol officers contacted individuals observed engaging in criminal activity and seized one handgun....

five individuals were arrested on various charges including reckless driving and disorderly conduct....

The remaining crowd gathered on the sidewalks dispersed slowly, and traffic diminished, allowing the street closures to be lifted at approximately 11:00 p.m.

There were no reported injuries; however, officers will be conducting follow up investigations on several complaints of criminal mischief.

Salem Police Chief Trevor Womack remarked, "Saturday's unruly protest, along with other emergency calls including an armed kidnapping, strained our limited patrol staffing resources. Multiple Salem officers were called in from home and partner agencies also responded to ensure safety was maintained and criminal offenders were appropriately held accountable.

"I am very proud of the work our officers accomplished under challenging and dangerous circumstances, yesterday's events just being the most recent examples. I want to thank them and our regional partners for their service, dedication, and professionalism."

For this incident, the Salem Police Department received assistance with traffic control from the Oregon State Police, and the Keizer Police Department assisted by handling calls in the city while patrol officers, MRT, and Strategic Investigations Unit detectives addressed the street take over and disorder.

It is very likely the daytime protest on foot was overpoliced and it should have been treated as a separate event from the nighttime street takeover with burnouts, drifting, and spinning. One was primarily an instance of political speech; the other was not at all an instance of political speech.

This looks like the Police trying to paint protest on foot as more dangerous and unlawful than it is, and guilty by association with the street takeover. 

There may not be anything more to say, but it's something to monitor as protests become likely here in the immediate future.

Addendum, February 3rd

The paper online has a totally misleading image-text combo, casting aspersions on the sidewalk protest.

This does not show a "street takeover"!

Previously:

Saturday, February 1, 2025

Kinder, Küche, Kirche comes to Transportation Funding

While there are more exigent matters in Washington, DC at the moment, a development this week has been an attempt to impose an ideology of Kinder, Küche, Kirche on transportation funding.

If you had any doubts, it's happening.

September 9th, 1936 (with an edit)
See also the editorial, Sept. 13th

When an unelected oligarch with private security and technical forces is taking over central government computer systems, the Department of Justice and FBI are undergoing purges, appointments and orders and actions constitute a blitzing vandalism on state capacity, databases and document libraries with years and decades of research are being scrubbed, and the flurry of those executive orders attempts (perhaps successfully!) to circumvent the legislative process, we have names for all that.

Conspicuously, the press is avoiding naming what is obvious. The front pages talk around the nub of the matter, framing things as minor deflections from norms, hardball gamesmanship, division rather than bipartisanship, and not the shattering of norms in any kind of coup.

It's all too much, but maybe we can understand a little in our focus area of transportation.

This past week the US Department of Transportation published documents that attempt to impose eugenics, segregation, and patriarchy on funding.

Eugenics in an order

Memo for climate denial, jim crow, and patriarchy

Eugenics, climate denial, jim crow, the patriarchy — the reactionary, fascist package is all right there. "Kinder, Küche, Kirche" might seem like an exaggeration, but that's really the revanchist game plan.