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    Florida Colored School Gets Historic Marker

    By Mary Spiller,

    13 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3atew9_0vOMzcgn00

    The Salerno Colored School is a once room School house that taught Black children in the early 1900s.

    A Florida one-room school house in Port Salerno has been approved for a historic marker. The 1934 Salerno Colored School could be looking at further awards in the upcoming years with the recognition of its rich history.

    Chair of the school for the Martin County Black Heritage Initiatives, Holly Griffin, told Treasure Coast Palm, “We have this incredible structure. People should know it’s there.”

    Her organization strives to improve current race relations by preserving and educating about Black history so that the surrounding Florida area can better understand the legacy the Black community has had on Port Salerno.

    The school was officially dedicated by the county Board of Public Instruction on Feb. 22, 1934, as a project headed by the Civil Works Administration. The one-room elementary school was one of the first in Martin County for Black kids and is only 25-by-31-foot. At the time, Black children were still not allowed to attend school with white children, so the Salerno Colored School was a place to support Black education.

    Griffin and others have recently been pushing to open the school again for educational programming, to further connect to the rich history of the space.

    “It’s important to remember the past,” Griffin explained. “Going back and touching the past is bringing us closer to who we are.”

    According to an interview with Treasure Coast Palm, Boyize Herring was a student at the Salerno Colored School in the 1950s. He recalled that the teachers taught first through fourth grade in the same schoolhouse.

    Herring said, “It was pretty strict, [but] I call myself very fortunate to be able to live to see the school receive a historical marker.”

    The Salerno Colored School could potentially be looking at a place on the National Register of Historic Places next, despite being rejected in the past.

    Julie Preast, a historic research volunteer who is in charge of completing the application for the marker, expressed that they were going to try again to get the schoolhouse listed under a different criterion than the first time but are striving for a place on the list nonetheless.

    Martin County Black Heritage Initiatives initially applied for the National Register of Historic Places designation based on the building’s architecture, but it was rejected because a small portion of the original building had to be reconstructed in the past.

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