Inscription
In early 1890, Inez Rathbun earned money teaching area students at the Ector County Courthouse. About the same time, Ector County organized a public school system. Over the next decades, the number of students in the area steadily increased. In 1921, the Texas Legislature officially established the Ector County Independent School District (ECISD).
Both Anglos and Mexican-American students attended the same school. In 1932, the district established the first African American school in a one-room structure at the corner of South Muskingum and Myrtle streets. Ella Sayles served as the first teacher for the initial class of eight students. As the school grew, the district added a second classroom and utilized space at a nearby church.
Although the district added three more rooms in the 1940s, by the 1947-48 school year, increased population caused the students to attend classes in shifts. In the fall of 1948, a campus for Blackshear High School opened at this site. Named for the noted Texas black educator Edward Lavoisier Blackshear, the school provided expanded facilities for African American students in the upper grade levels.
Upon integration of all the district schools in 1966, the campus was converted for use as Blackshear Middle School. In 1983, it became a magnet elementary school. Its link to early education in the community and to its namesake educator remain significant today. (2006)
Location
Sources
More markers in Ector
Ector County Courthouse
Odessa, TX
Seat of justice for Ector, created out of Tom Green County in 1887 and organized in 1891.
Ector County Land Rush
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Here in 1904 a fight involved almost every man in Ector County, over filing a claim for 4 sections of public land.
El Paso Natural Gas Company's First Compressor Transmission Engine
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A landmark tool in man's conquest of energy.
Odessa
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After the Texas and Pacific Railway extended its line to the South Plains of Texas in 1881, the Odessa Land and Townsite Company of...
Penwell
Penwell, TX
Birthplace of Ector County's Oil boom.
