School & District Management

Richmond, Va., Schools Rename the Last of Their Confederate-Named Schools

The changes come in a city that once served as the capital of the Confederacy
By Caitlyn Meisner — June 28, 2023 6 min read
Virginia's largest school system, Fairfax County Public Schools, has removed the name of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee from one of its high schools in favor of the late Civil Rights icon Rep. John Lewis, in Springfield, Va., on July 24, 2020. The school is in the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

The ongoing nationwide campaign to change the names of schools bearing the names of Confederate War figures reached a turning point of sorts last week, as the city that was once the capital of the confederacy—Richmond, Va.—announced plans to rename its last schools with Confederacy-linked names.

The school board said four schools would undergo name changes immediately. They are: John B. Cary Elementary, Ginter Park Elementary, Binford Middle, and George Wythe High, all of which were named and built between 1913 and 1951. John Cary, Lewis Ginter, and James Binford all fought for the Confederacy; Cary and Binford were also superintendents of Richmond. George Wythe was an attorney general during the Colonial era. Going forward, two of the schools will carry the names of Richmonders who were major contributors to or pioneers in the city school system.

Jason Kamras, Richmond’s superintendent, said the district feels it has a duty to children to make sure the name across the school is “one that the children can be proud of.”

He said the district is not trying to set a national precedent, but is committed to removing these Confederate-affiliated names.

“We have a shared commitment to removing any names that are associated with the Confederacy and ultimately with the ownership of enslaved Africans,” Kamras explained. “That seems like the bare minimum we could do for our kids.”

The affected schools, like the district itself, also serve a largely Black population. At the former Ginter Park Elementary, 93 percent of students are Black, according to Education Week’s research. The student population at the former Binford Middle and John B. Cary Elementary schools are both more than 60 percent Black.

Nationwide, campaigns to rename schools after Confederate leaders peaked following high-profile, race-related incidents, such as the the May 2020 killing of George Floyd and the 2017 white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Va., and then experienced a lull as COVID-19 spread, causing school shutdowns.Nationwide, 59 such name changes have occurred since Education Week began tracking them in June of 2020.

But Richmond’s public school system has maintained a steady pace of renaming schools from Confederate leaders to historical figures from the city. With these latest changes, Richmond became the city with the most name changes. This decision has also made Virginia the state with the most name changes in the nation.

Other states—mainly Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, Alabama, and Texas—have retained Confederacy-linked names on dozens of schools. As of June 2023, Texas has 88 schools across the state named for Confederates and Georgia has 61.

The debate to change names has extended to military bases as well. Fort Liberty—formerly Fort Bragg, named for Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg—was changed earlier this month, but Republican presidential candidates Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former Vice President Mike Pence said they would restore the base’s original name if they are elected. Fort Polk in Louisiana was also renamed to honor Sgt. William Henry Johnson, a Black soldier from World War I.

Many of these schools were named in an effort to make Black people feel unwelcome in public spaces, said Rivka Maizlish, senior research analyst with the Southern Poverty Law Center.

“This was a clear sign; it wasn’t just an accident or the name was always there,” Maizlish said. “This was a very specific, concerted effort to demonstrate that Blacks were not welcome.”

Richmond’s efforts are especially significant because the city served as the Confederate capital during the Civil War. Jefferson Davis, the Confederate president, is buried in Richmond at Hollywood Cemetery, along with dozens of other military officials. This cemetery also serves as the final resting place for thousands of Confederate soldiers.

What district leaders are saying

Stephanie Rizzi, the chair of the city’s school board, said the district wants to move beyond commemorating Confederates who supported enslavement.

“That would include the ancestry of most of the children who attend Richmond schools,” Rizzi noted. “Names matter, and we want our educational spaces to carry names that communicate that our young people are loved.”

As someone who grew up in Richmond as a Black woman, Rizzi said, she and her community never questioned whom these spaces were named after.

“I think for most of us, we just assumed that these people weren’t nefarious or weren’t people that could harm us,” Rizzi said. “I think that people detach from [the name] and associated the names simply with the love that they received from the people who are inside of those schools.”

Pushback and praise from residents

While the reception to the name-change plans was mostly positive from the community, some Black Richmonders were upset with the changes, according to Rizzi.

“I think it’s largely because people here have become habituated to the presence of those names,” she explained. “They had the monuments before and associated those names with the positive experiences they had ... and saw it more as a tradition changing instead of really looking at the names.”

Rizzi said some believed changing the names was trying to erase history.

“We are getting to a point in history where we are asking these questions and aren’t afraid to ask them anymore,” Rizzi said. “I see this as a way of moving us beyond the painful history that Richmond is known for.”

Kamras said these changes are also meant to recognize other people in Richmond’s history.

“It’s uplifting the history of a lot of really important, powerful people in this city’s history and present,” Kamras said. “It’s well past due time for that.”

Maizlish said efforts across the country to erect statues commemorating Confederate figures were a form of erasing history. She said many generals and leaders were embarrassed to have lost the war.

“So they tried to remake the meaning of the Civil War and erase the struggle of slavery versus freedom,” Maizlish said. “All of these monuments [and] statues honoring Confederates went up in an effort to say, ‘These are all American heroes.’”

Taking down these statues and renaming schools is an effort to restore history, not erase it, Maizlish said.

The new names

Kamras and Rizzi said the new name of each school was chosen by committees to represent a significant aspect of the city and state’s history. After community members sent in nominations, the committees—which comprised administrators, teachers, parents, and students—recommended names to Kamras, who made the final recommendations to the board.

The former John B. Cary school is being renamed after Lois Harrison-Jones, the first African-American and female superintendent in Richmond. Ginter Park is renamed to Francis W. McClenney, after the first Black teacher and principal at the elementary school.

Binford Middle’s new name is Dogwood Middle, after Virginia’s state flower and tree. The district is rebuilding George Wythe High and converting it into an arts high school named the Richmond High School for the Arts.

The district has not discussed whether to rename two other schools—one named for John Marshall and the other for Thomas Jefferson. Both Virginians owned slaves in addition to their significant contributions to history.

Related Tags:

Maya Riser-Kositsky, Librarian and Data Specialist contributed to this article.

Events

Jobs Virtual Career Fair for Teachers and K-12 Staff
Find teaching jobs and other jobs in K-12 education at the EdWeek Top School Jobs virtual career fair.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Classroom Technology Webinar
Educators & EdTech: Co-Designing Tomorrow's Classroom
Join our interactive discussion on integrating voices in edtech product development. Discover the power of co-creation, hear real conversations, and be part of shaping the future of digital learning.
Content provided by Giant Steps by GoGuardian
School & District Management K-12 Essentials Forum Start the School Year Strong: How K-12 Leaders Can Create Thriving Schools for Teachers and Staff
Join this free event to get inspired by creative and proven ways to motivate your team the entire school year.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

School & District Management 4 Tips to Help Schools Prepare for the Next Pandemic
Now is the time for thoughtful pandemic planning, experts say, with insights from COVID-19 fresh in educators' memories.
4 min read
Illustration of road map and pins.
iStock / Getty Images Plus
School & District Management Q&A A District’s Coaching Program for Principals Takes a Holistic Approach to Address the Struggle With Stress
A large urban district adopted a coaching program to support school leaders' individual needs and behaviors, not just intructional concerns.
5 min read
Illustration of a diverse group of 7 professionals helping one another climb a succession of large bars with some using a ladder.
iStock/Getty
School & District Management Trump Says Parents Should Elect Principals. What Would That Look Like?
The former president says principal elections will let parents take schools back from “radical Marxist maniacs."
7 min read
Former President Donald Trump addresses the crowd at the Moms for Liberty national summit in Philadelphia on June 30, 2023. Trump is more focused on education during his third presidential run, and has said multiple times that school principals should be elected.
Former President Donald Trump addresses the crowd at the Moms for Liberty national summit in Philadelphia on June 30, 2023. Trump is more focused on education during his third presidential run, and has said multiple times that school principals should be elected.
Matt Rourke/AP
School & District Management How Can Districts Prepare for the Next Pandemic?
There's some evidence that more school districts have prepared for the next pandemic, and specifically considered how to keep classes going.
7 min read
Image of strategy planning flow chart.
Hiob/iStock/Getty