When Mario Rivera attended the Blackwell School in Marfa, Texas, in the 1950s, he didn’t think much about it.
“It was just a normal school,” the 79-year-old said. “The students were, of course, Hispanic, being that it was a segregated school.”
He didn’t realize it was segregated at age 7 because everyone around him was in the same boat.
“We were never told that there was another school for the white students across the tracks,” Rivera said.
As an adult, he and fellow alumni in the nonprofit Blackwell School Alliance have worked to not only save the school from demolition but preserve its history. After years of lobbying Congress in partnership with the National Parks Conservation Association, President Joe Biden this week authoriz the Blackwell School as a national historic site, and the whole country will soon be able to learn from it as America’s newest National Park Service site.
history is preserved and remembered for the generations to come.”
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From 1909 until 1965, the Blackwell School was a segregated school for first through eighth-grade students of Mexican descent in Marfa, Texas.
“If you’re a historian, you’ll remember the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which brought this great, great territory of the Southwest into the United States. Well, that treaty ensured that people of Mexican descent would be given the full rights of American citizenship,” said Gretel Enck, president of the Blackwell School Alliance. “The way that played out was not true. Traditionally, folks have been denied many, many rights, and education is just one of them.”
speaking Spanish. At one point, a mock funeral for the language was held at the school, and students were punished with a paddle if they spoke it, according the National Parks Conservation Association.
“A lot of us forgot our language and didn’t want our children to speak Spanish,” former student Jessi Silva said in a statement. “But also today, we are in danger of forgetting our history. The Blackwell School is part of our history, in Marfa and beyond.”
That history is complicated and not all bad, according to Enck. While some former students recall feeling humiliated and discriminated against in school and the larger community, others had “wonderful” memories, according to the Blackwell School Alliance.
“We also had a core group of really dedicated teachers at Blackwell who were sort of overcoming this systemic problem of discrimination against these children,” Enck said. “And one interesting thing about a lot of our alumni is they went on to careers in education.”
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Not only is the Blackwell School one of the last remaining “’Mexican Schools” of its kind in good standing condition, but it will also be “one of the first national park sites dedicated to telling modern Latino history,” according to the National Parks Conservation Association.
“Everywhere you read about other races, but the Hispanic portion of American history is very limited,” Rivera said. “The preservation of the Blackwell School here allows for a little bit of Hispanic history to be exposed.”
There are a number of spaces within the National Park Service’s existing 423 sites, where visitors can learn about Latinx American history, but the Park Service is continually working on increasing representation and inclusion across its system.
“It is our solemn responsibility as caretakers of America’s national treasures to tell the whole story of our nation’s heritage for the benefit of present and future generations,” National Park Service Director Chuck Sams said in a statement.
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When can I visit?
The Blackwell School is currently open to the public on weekends afternoons and by appointment on weeknights. Details can be found on the Blackwell School Alliance website. It’s currently being managed by the Alliance.
It’s expected to take more than a year for the National Park Service to formally acquire the land and establish it as a national historic site.
“The National Park Service will continue working closely with key stakeholders dedicated to the preservation of Blackwell School, and those directly impacted by the de facto segregation of Mexican Americans during the early 1900s, to preserve and interpret this significant historic site to the public,” Sams said.
Enck is excited about the resources that come with the new designation.
”I don’t just need money. I mean all of the expertise that the Park Service brings in telling challenging stories and complicated stories of American history,” she said. “We really hope that this opens up doors for other stories of Hispanic, Latino history to be told.”
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