EWP 12 School Bus Route Cover Page Loudoun County Consolidated High and Elementary 1954

Item

Title
EWP 12 School Bus Route Cover Page Loudoun County Consolidated High and Elementary 1954
Description
1954 Cover Page for School Bus Routes Loudoun County Consolidated High and Elementary Schools section. Reference white students. No detail.
Tag
1954 Cover Page, School Bus Routes, Loudoun County Consolidated High, Elementary School, white students
Place
Virginia
Identifier
1001060
Is Version Of
1001060_EWP_ScanCover.docx
1001060_EWP_ScanCover.pdf
Is Part Of
Transportation
Date Created
2023-08-02 21:35:03 +0000
Format
Office Open Xml Word Processing Document
Number
bb6369f05f96777b94ae94c1705aff20c9f976d9869aa22bd1b1ef71ed2aa084
Source
/Volumes/T7 Shield/EWP/Elements/EWP_Files/source/Ingest One/12 Transportation/12-3 Routes/12-3 Routes 1954 White Kids/1001060_EWP_ScanCover.docx
Publisher
Digitized by Edwin Washingon Project
Rights
Loudoun County Public Schools
Language
English
Replaces
1001060_EWP_ScanCover.docx
extracted text
Catalog: 12.3: School Bus Routes 1954 (white)

School Bus Routes: Loudoun County
March 9, 1954
Recommended to serve the Loudoun County Consolidated High
School and the Elementary School (white students)
Scanned by the Edwin Washington Project, 1/25/2017
Edwin Washington Project Catalog: 12.3: School Bus Routes 1954 (white)
Welcome to the Edwin Washington Project
www.edwinwashingtonproject.org
In June, 1867, a “colored” 16 year old boy named Edwin Washington worked in a hotel
in Leesburg, Virginia for five dollars a month, plus board, with the “privilege of coming
to school” in between errands. Unfortunately, this meant he couldn’t attend school on a
regular basis, or at all during court weeks. Still, he went to class whenever he could.
This research project is a monument to Edwin and all of the African-American children
and their parents, educators and patrons of that time and through to the end of
segregation in Loudoun County in order to honor their bravery and tenacity to learn.
The project is done in collaboration with the Records Office of the Loudoun County
Public Schools, local history clubs, Churches like the Prosperity Baptist Church of
Conklin, private and government archives and the Black History Committee of the
Friends of the Balch Library.
We also are collecting data on white schools, for the purpose of comparison with
“colored” African-American schools.
Larry Roeder
Principal Investigator
File Size
112 KB