Inscription
In 1938, members of Beulah Baptist Church established the only school for Black students in Fort Walton Beach. For many years, due to racial segregation, classes were held in private homes and later within the church. In 1952, Fort Walton Beach Mayor Tom Brooks donated land adjacent to the church for a public school for Black students.
The Okaloosa County School Board erected a two-room building, naming it Brooks School in his honor. In its early years, Brooks School was led by its first teachers: Bessie Corbit and Charlie H. Hill. Hill also served as its first principal. Over the years, many respected Black educators from across the county contributed to the school, impacting the lives of countless students.
By 1954, as the school board consolidated Black high schools in Okaloosa County, Brooks School was reorganized into Brooks Elementary School to serve younger children. Meanwhile, junior high and high school students were transferred to the newly opened Carver-Hill High School in Crestview, commuting over sixty miles each day by bus until W. E. Combs High School was established in Fort Walton Beach in 1962.
Brooks Elementary School closed in 1968, when the county's public schools were fully integrated.
Location
Sources
More markers in Okaloosa
Baker High School
Baker, FL
The Town of Baker, a stop on the Florida, Alabama and Gulf Railroad, was platted in 1910 and grew up around the timber and turpentine...
Boggy Mill Company Site
Niceville, FL
The Boggy Mill Company incorporated in August 1908.
Niceville Fire, 1934
Niceville, FL
Niceville Fire of 1934, as reported in local newspapers: “The 200 CCC men formed bucket brigades and in cooperation with the fire crews...
Old Maritime City
Niceville, FL
Niceville was the center of the commercial fishing industry of the Choctawhatchee Bay region, the basis of the community's prosperity.
Old Niceville High School
Niceville, FL
In May 1924, George Nathey conveyed seven acres to the Okaloosa County Board of Public Instruction for a school site.
