Inscription
In 1922, the Duval County Board of Public Instruction opened South Jacksonville School No. 107, the only public school on the southside of Jacksonville for African-American children in grades one through nine. Spearheading the building of this school were black community leaders Douglas Anderson (1884-1936) and W.R. Thorpe (1893-1967).
Anderson, a graduate of Tuskegee Institute, began the first free school bus transportation service for the school and was president of the Parents-Teachers Association. In 1945, the school board renamed the school the Douglas Anderson School. It became a high school in 1955 and quickly became an educational and cultural center for African-Americans from communities all over southeastern Duval County.
Community envolvement was the strength of the school. Even though high school enrollment never exceeded 400-500 students, they achieved prominence in academics, athletics, and the arts far beyond their numbers. Douglas Anderson School closed in 1968 as a result of school desegregation. Afterwards, it served as a campus for Florida Junior College, and a 7th grade center.
It re-opened in 1985 as the Douglas Anderson School for the Arts.
Location
Sources
More markers in Duval
Historic Manhattan Beach, Florida
Jacksonville, FL
Manhattan Beach was Florida’s first African American beach resort.
"mother" Midway A.m.e. Church
Jacksonville, FL
Midway A.M.E. Church was organized on Sunday, June 10, 1865, a few weeks after the Confederate Army in Florida surrendered to the Union...
1960 Civil Rights Demonstration
Jacksonville, FL
On Saturday, August 27, 1960, 40 Youth Council demonstrators from the Jacksonville Branch of the National Association for the Advancement...
Florida’s First African-American Insurance Company--1901-2001
Jacksonville, FL
The Afro-American Insurance Company, formerly the Afro-American Industrial and Benefits Association, was founded in 1901 to provide...
Mungen House
Jacksonville, FL
This frame vernacular house was built in 1928 for Doane Martin Mungen, Sr. (1872-1948) and his wife Mary Elizabeth Mungen (1874-1955).
