Historical Marker

E.D. Stroud School

Colham Ferry Elementary School, 191 Colham Ferry Road, Watkinsville · Watkinsville · Oconee

Georgia marker

Inscription

E.D. Stroud School A Georgia Equalization School. E. D. Stroud School was established in 1956 as part of a statewide "equalization" effort in Georgia's African-American public schools. As part of Georgia's massive resistance to federally mandated school integration, politicians and school officials sought to address the blatant geographic and racial disparities in education by constructing hundreds of new (but still segregated) schools across the state during the 1950s-60s.

This school was built to replace Watkinsville Rosenwald School, located here until its demolition in 1956. Named for Rosenwald School Principal Edwin David Stroud, E. D. Stroud School included a home economics lab as well as a workshop and cannery in addition to traditional academic subjects. In 1969, as part of a countywide plan for desegregation, E. D. Stroud School became the integrated Oconee County Intermediate School.

The school was renamed Colham Ferry Elementary School in 1996. Erected by the Georgia Historical Society, the Watkinsville City Council, Bethel Baptist Church, the Oconee County Historical Society, the Oconee County Board of Education, and the Georgia Natural Resources Foundation 2014.1

Location

AddressColham Ferry Elementary School, 191 Colham Ferry Road, Watkinsville
CityWatkinsville
CountyOconee
StateGeorgia

Sources


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