Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutShall We Overcome Our Racial Divide n the night Jim Reddick, Louis Whitehead and George Johnson, all cellmates in Bryan city jail, were lynched on a remote stretch of Boonville Road, the Parker sis- ters were entertaining their visiting out -of- town friends on the verandas and lawn of their spacious home near the downtown. Their party was, by all accounts, a brilliant social affair. Milton Parker, one of Bryan's 0 U most prominent and wealthy residents, appar- 0 . ently spared no expense for his daughters' guests. Music, dancing and conversation abounded, with "ices and salads temptingly served," while the sounds of Herb's Light RActik.L Guard from Houston drifted through on the warm June evening. Meanwhile, about 12 blocks away, a mob of 100 residents of Brazos, Grimes and Madison counties who were "armed to the ....-0 - DI te eth," smashed the locks of the city jail doors an d hauled out Reddick, Whitehead and Jo hnson. All three were black, and all were IDE? accused of raping or assaulting white women in separate and confusing circumstances. The three were loaded onto a wagon, dragged out to the edge of Carter Creek — just east of where FM 158 intersects with Boonville Road C AN WE BRIDGE THE GULF today — and hanged from separate limbs of the same Tree by the light of an enormous bonfire. BETWEEN BLACKS AND WHITES But other than occupying space on the same page of the next day's edition of The IN BRYAN /COLLEGE STATION? Daily Eagle, the two events, of course, had nothing to do with each other, and the Parker sisters and the lynching victims had nothing to do with each other. Thar is just the point. Despite their geo- BY CINDY NEVELS graphic nearness, the Parker sisters and the lynching victims lived in two different> -••411. 8 INSITh /FrrtrtIMu 1997 y . .. < . < , <y< .. > < . § . . : > y � y y§ +«« ■ ~ ^ : / ° ^ ƒ / \ i } \ . \ i \ : / » yz . w \ j The says Maurice . / �\ %� \.. . . . w. y. Green s� me _» <.. church cell ''',':, :::11 : ;!.. , ,.. \\ \ , * / e wdNGamore ° \ "..4%, . C C m W9mn } *( ||4 blacks ad whites ' \ * i� * f t « egAr >a: ilk '4044 . /� • :\. : . ` A * IA Not .� !� 2 ?< s ® ° a �T! ` § «, \ J \ ,r NO .1 ' I V r‘i '` - ,... !:'.. - ` . i i , j j � ` : N , .. 1 worlds that had almost nothing M.. change, we citizens still in common. One world was. stand on opposite sides of a white; the ocher, black. In one racial chasm, visible in near - world were wealth, power, ly every aspect of our lives — access and privilege; in the '• where we work or go to other, poverty, powerlessness, school, where we live, where desperate need and coral exclu- we shop, where we play, Sion. . where we worship. That was 1896, the same / "There are those who say year the U.S. Supreme Court, 7 we have no problems, who in Plersy r: Ferguson, instituted i t don't even realize rhere is the "separate but equal" doc- ; J another Brazos County," says trine, driving a deep and ' b P the Rev. Maurice Green. "IE wounding wedge in race rela- you live on one side of Brazos dons from which the nation County, you see only one has yet to recover. This article _ lifestyle." Green, who grew will look at the rift as it has "".z, up in Bryan, is an assistant played our in Brazos Counry,, `� *` bishop for his denomination, focusing primarily on relations the Church of God in Chrisr, between blacks and whites ry for an east - central region of because it is here — rather Texas. "Bur if you go into than in any other racial rela- another area of Brazos tionship involving Hispanics County, you see a Locally dif- or Asians — that the rifr is ferent world." deepest and most enduring. "There is a fence up, More than a cenrury lacer, there is a barrier, There is a how well have these racial separation. There is a part of wounds in Brazos Counry THEY WOULD COME IN THROUGH Brazos County that is in healed? What is different in denial than there is a prob- our area from a century ago, or A LITTLE GATE THAT WAS AT THE END lem existing in our world, 25 y ears ago, or even to years ZONE AND OUT OF THE SEA OF and we choose to overlook it back? How do African- or choose to look rhe other American and Anglo residents WHITES AT ANY OF THE GAMES, YOU way. And as long as ir's not of Brazos County compare with in your backyard, or at your one another, and how well do COULD ALWAYS SEE TWO LITTLE BLACK front door, then we can eas- we understand and ger along DOTS ily wish it away. And that's with each other? ' unfortunate." And how far and how much And yet because he is a have we put behind us our — ELLA DONOVAN pasror, Green, whose deep, sometimes violent, often sad Retired Bryan schoolteacher whose father and uncle were once resonant voice rolls like soft and usually embarrassing his the only blacks allowed to attend Texas A &M football games thunder, would also be the Cory of racial division? first to say that there is ample cause for hope. Orhers join him in his optimism for the I nrerviews with more Than 50 local African - American, future. While some point ro significant change going on right Anglo and Hispanic residents, as well as examinations now in places of influence — such as city government, civic and of U.S. Census data and other statistics reveal a county neighborhood organizarions, and a possible new role that Texas chat, like the rest of the nation, has undergone enormous A &M Universiry may play in the community — Green and change in race relations. Here, as elsewhere, civil rights many others point to the largely unfulfilled bur nonetheless laws have dramatically altered the landscape, at least on enormous potential of the church communiry to bring about the surface, and opened opportunities that African- Americans true racial healing. a generarion or two ago could never have foreseen except in "Let's address the problems we have in Brazos County," Green fantasy. argues. "Let's take care of it. Let's eliminate it. We're intelligent Yet those same interviews and statistics reveal a troubling pic- enough to sir down ar rhe table and get it done. We shouldn't cure of a profound and lingering schism in our midst. Much evi- have the problems we're having now in 1996. There should not dente suggests that beneath all the political and insrirurional be two cities [of Bryan]; There should not be two [Brazos] coun- 10 /NSITEIFrrs::unnr 1997 WHITE BLACK HISPANIC Median family income Texas $35,080 $20,613 $20,121 Brazos County $35,635 $14,404 $21,157 % Unemployment ries. ... One of die greatest things we can Texas 5.8 13.4 10.9 do is heal together. We realize we have a Brazos County 4.6 15.4 7.6 % Holding lot of wounds, age -old wounds, that we Managerial /Prof. Jobs can heal. Is ours to do." Texas 29.0 17.2 13.4 Brazos County 34.5 15.8 14.6 WHERE WE'VE BEEN % Families Below ppil understand race relations Poverty Line in Brazos County today Texas 10.2 27.6 29.7 requires a shorn history ght Brazos County 9.1 39.6 25.7 son. And for that, you might % High School sit down and have coffee Graduates some morning with Ella Texas 76.2 66.1 44.6 — Donovan, a call, elegant and gracious for- Brazos County 85.1 59.6 48.2 mer schoolteacher who lives in a Bryan Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 1990 Census neighborhood called Freedman Town. Freedman Town is the county's first in the city limits were allowed co live in idents who lived in large and spacious black neighborhood. The name has lin- one place, and one place only: a three - homes needed cooks, maids, laundresses gored through the years like a haunting; block -by- three- block area next to the city and gardeners. a persistent memory of unfulfilled hope. cemetery. Thar is the same reason for the location Nor on any map, and largely unknown Home to the "freedmen" of Bryan, as of College Station's largest African - now among white residents of Bryan, the the former slaves were known for some American neighborhoods. College Hills, name itself is an evocation; a conjuring years after the Civil War, the neighbor- near the intersection of University Drive Of a rime past, when enslaved residents hood also was locared conveniently wirhin and Texas Avenue, was home to the maids of Brazos County who had been sec free walking distance of what is now the Bryan and laborers for the college professors' and who wanted CO continue to live with- Hisroric District. There wealthy white res- homes built nearby in East Gare in M A R K E T P L the P L A C. ] _ F , : o • . . 3 � l � B razos d!!e Ai .31Ulii' .+r L - _ • BRAZOS TRADER Wood Floors •ANTIfS & COLLECTIBLES. Our Serv Serving the Brazos Valley since 1981 Traditional Solid Oak Flooring... enduring quality and beauty 1 SELLING THE USUAL — THE UNUSUAL • Traditional Oak • Sand & Finish a Sacred Trust • Laminated Glue Down • Wax and Polish Open Mon —Fri 10 -5; Sat 9 -5 Cali for Free Estimate - Mitchell Smith, Owner All major credit cards accepted 690 -6713 210 W. 26th St. Downtown Bryan Member, National Wood Flooring Assoc.., &CS Home Builders Assoc. HILLIER FUNERAL HOME _ ! 1) ' u • It o,te Me a ♦ , Al 1 i r - - WHEN ITS WORTH • Pre - planned funerals iIlevoe DOING RIGHT! �t • Monuments Want to Subscribe? I • Personal Service j • Custom Color Matchings • Serving Bryan /College Station , Call: (409) 823 -5567 • btaallcoverings • Floor Coverings since 1918 or Fax: (409) 823 -3894 I ®3267 or E -Mail: insite @bihs.net I Stop by our booth at the Home or Write t0: Insite Publishing Products and Garden Show P.O. Box 1387 wa• � .. 822-1571 502 W. 26th, Bryan Br TX 77806 f Bryan, 1501 Ftdl 2818 • College Station I N.SIJ 1 /I rnRtiARv 1997 1 1 s;, i 1930s. The Southgate area =."'''''''''''''- ` _ to attend football games developed in the 1910s and were her father and uncle, 1950s in response co domesric the football coach at Kemp work available in the neighbor - �r' High. hood along George Bush Drive, ' They would come in as well as custodial work ar through a little gate that Texas A &M. r ' was ar the end zone, and out Much has not changed. To zy of the sea of whirrs at any of this day, the same lines of the games, you could always demarcation between black and , see two little black dots,' white neighborhoods set decades s h e says, laughing and shak- ago reappear in current census L ing her head. reports. While African - Racism then was virulent Americans in Bryan gradually read out to the east inro s and obvious. Any black res- P , ident of the county who is neighborhoods of Candy Hill " older than say, 40, can tell and Easr Park, and to the west bitter vales of exclusion and into what is now Carver -Kemp humiliation. Women were and North Bryan, they moved nor allowed m try on clothes inro only a few areas south of in department scores or to William Joel Bryan Parkway. return or exchange them if And in College Station, the they did nor fir. Hamburgers black neighborhoods remain from the Dairy Queen had to basically where they were 50 41 DON T THINK GOVERNMENT CAN be bought through a back years ago. HEAL ANY WOUNDS THAT PEOPLE HAVE door and eaten outside. As the 1990 derailed census "Whites Only signs were tracts show, historically white BUT CERTAINLY GOVERNMENT CAN SET standard decorations of any neighborhoods in Bryan and public doorway or waiting College Station remain over- AN EXAMPLE., room. whelmingly white. And while "It put a bitter taste in Hispanics can be found in vir- — LONNIE STABLER people's mouths," recalls wally every neighborhood of Green, 48, whose father and the two cities, the census shows Bryan mayo grandfather grew up in many neighborhoods with no Bryan. "I don't think a lot of black residents at all. [white] people meant any harm, as much as They were jusr reared that way. Ir was a way of life. We were inferior, and that's the B ut back to Freedman Town and ro Ella Donovan, who way they perceived black people.... All of those things that were was born in 1929, though you would never guess it in place brought about a negative thought about the powers who from her youthful air. Slim and stylish down ro her were in place, who could have easily brought about a uniting of gold- colored sandals, Donovan can rell 100 or more peoples instead." stories of what it was like ro grow up in Bryan's old- School integration came late to the area — and only by fire est black neighborhood. or court order. College Station schools were forced to inregrare Her father, R.C. Neal, was principal of the ciry's all -black almost overnight in 1966_ when a fire of mysterious origin Kemp High School for 28 years until his retirement in 1958. destroyed the all -black Lincoln High School on Holleman Drive. The city's newest elementary school on Martin Luther King Jr. Bryan schools succumbed at lasr in 1971 after a 10 -year legal Street is named for him. battle involving federal court orders, and was among the last dis- Donovan remembers a close -knit community of hard- working rricts in the nation to inregrare fully. parents who cared for one anorher's children and depended on Until the 1970s, other than a handful of black -owned busi- each other for support and help of all kinds; of street ball games nesses and some reaching jobs in segregated schools, most of the before there were any city parks where black children could play; jobs available for African Americans were back- breaking labor in of a quirky county sheriff who terrorized the neighborhood by corron fields near the Brazos River, farming Their own plots or galloping through on horseback long after other law enforcement sharecropping other people's l,uul, custodial and laundry work on officials had swirched co automobiles. the Texas A &M campus, or domestic work in white people's In chose days, African Americans were nor allowed on the cam - homes. pus of Texas A &M except as laborers. The only blacks permitted As many residents recall — and rheir recollections are con - 12 /NS /TL-7Frmiumty 1997 firmed by census data — not even score Sel'l'ing the Bmzos Valley clerk jobs or restaurant work was available very widely until the 1970s, and it wasn't until the 1980s and into the 1990s that a Health care especially for you. scattering of African Americans holding professional and managerial jobs appeared. Only in the past decade have the two Medical specialties at the school districts made serious efforts to tic Scott & White Clinic, recruit minority Faulty, and persistent College Station, include: complaints still focus on the low numbers •Allergy of black public school Teachers. • Audiology The result, as scores of residents resti- • Cardiology • Dermatology tied, is that many of Brazos County's best a Family Practice b young and brightest black residents — 4 a } o Gastroenterology of whom might have served as badly ... ' ' ,i, • General Surgery needed role models and who might have • • Health Education played a significant role in the growth of " • Hypertension the black community — have left. Many / , - • Internal Medicine black residents who had strong aspirations, r Mental Health Services ability or skills had to move away from the •. •= € ,. ` • Nephrology county to find good jobs, leaving behind 1'' • Neurology a persistently poor and, in terms of pope- +i ' : Obstetrics and Gynecology Occupational Medicine larion growth, stagnant community that Ophthalmology was quickly our paced 1 Y 1 by } a burgeoning, • _ ` ` • Orthopedic Surgery white, upwardly mobile, college student- • Otolaryngology centered populace. „ , , • Pediatric Dentistry ' l-t� • Pediatrics C ensus figures tell the srory: • Plastic Surgery Ar rhe rime of the lynching, t ' 1 ` <_ • • Radiology blacks outnumbered whites '''t • Speech Pathology — 8,845 to about 8,800. Bur • Urgent Care a cennu later, n 1 bout Alcohol and Drug Depen blacks made up only about dence Treatment Program 11 percent of the county population — Serving Scott & White Health Plan members 13,638 blacks compared ro 94,782 whines. along with all other Brazos Valley residents. While many whites also lefr rown to pursue careers, their exodus was compara- S Q_ tively smaller and had less of an impact on i SCOTT W I IITE the community. Far more jobs were avail- ��11��// (JL able for those whites who srayed, includ- & CLINIC, COLLEGE STATION ing work in family businesses, new and 1600 University Drive East existing industries, banking and govern- (409) 691 -3300 or (800) 299 -1212 ment — occuparions not widely available for blacks until rhe last two decades. "All the people I grew up with and Comprehensive, personalized, high quality health care. went to school with have left because there _ weren't very many opportunities here," r i says Lt. Larry Johnson, who, as chief of BRYAN GOLF COURSE criminal investigation, is rhe highest rank- ing African American on the College Station Police Department. "In order to 4 for s44* realize Their goals, they had to move on." Melt Pruitt, a retired school counselor, Mondays and Tuesdays Only iesclu(tln�; hotktat•s zn d special woos) saw the same pattern repeated in Bryan: When Bryan students went to college or includes green f ees and cart when they graduated from high school, for two players they went to where they could Find work. otter expires February 28. 199 Many of them went to Houston, many of 'Must 17tesent col ipon to Receive. Discount then went to Dallas, or ro California, > I 823-0126 [r1 Please see RACE. page 18 , A•,n'sn Golf 206 West villa Maria (Northwest ii detsection 01 South College Avenue and villa Marini L J /NSITE /Feoeunity 1997 13 i Y c,., , 'r1 -:'<a RACE continued _ Iron/ page 13 a�� FwiS+ =��C;t �' ti01.7gC c3=i: •- 1 Philadelphia, New York. Some of them a.; ..-=.4 `"":-fit;, C O j have gottten excellent jobs." '"%isq,!`y I .5r c Since 1990, local governments have -4" > h?.-i. made str concerted efforts co recruit Y' • ,*0:`;~. � P roducts l l� ; t , > LS�._ t( � . uhdusrry and manufacturing jobs co the ( +, area through the creation of the join( • • 1 4 "•'' Y' ` , Bryan /College Station Economic c7�� 4,,, � c r� 4r tg A Development Corp. Until recently, corn- �i5 .,hitif' + }s ,latent and dependency on Texas ACM .,. , ,l!,�:;, } allowed the areas economy ro rest on the �. si •`•a5s' : 'fi r • - ;z , Garden shoulders of an instinlcion that had been , `�3 3 ' " '� all -white and all -male for most of its his- ... ''r�yy � rot }. Jobs held by African - Americans there r, t, ,t,, 41:, �, a < T ,A p. S how still rend be overwhelmingly low - _ ,,,t ing and menial, and its = 10,000 sntdents • ents ,C=i yAirtt� ..c.74. comprise a highly competirive wort: force ., ; r %; �4,: in the surrounding community. z`�Y'1f;'' I "Blacks were forced to compete with 5 �j4 • ,i :'.;;, ,•t.J± saiden[s for jobs," says Dale Marsico, who • `.,r r Y.,. . recently moved to Washington, D.C., after " T ,I1 � a 22 -year stint as head of the Brazos Valley t r ��� Community Arrion Agency. "They're corn- is t:�s `ter % 3 • .. a peting with someone ger[ing a college :•ii.4'!0 _ ;.". degree, who is trying to put their husband +^ .3 : f, sue•;;_ through school, or who is getting a mas- gi.' . . Y y ,, ter's degree and is working part time. . :tom � , ., ; 3 c'�' �i . r` You've got this huge migrant worker pop- e,, ; >,� �s,r -5 ;; March 1 -2 , 1997 +d ,K•.,�`-�,:.yn; ularion that comes in with good skills, dri- ",`' • `W�' Saturday 10-6 wing that price down. §`.11$7:, Sk : ' Some [black] high school kid gets out ,a � ;�,^,, • >a °5 Sunday 12-5 for rhe summer and wants to go to work for •,t..M, ?•S s [fast-food resrwranrs]. People will look ar t',: "� "' The Brazos Center the 17- year -old kid who has no work hisco- ', > , 2. 4 ry, and they've also got a 20- year -old A &M y14r co - � sophomore. Who are rhey going to pick ?" 7 2 4 y BC 01-IBA WHERE WE ARE NOW 1 :3 �eoli : S5 arsico, who is white, argues that racism itself y 4-t, rt • G 1: j *,Siff t. ar �r; Call 846 -1420 plays a small role today in i' 7;; =� rhe difficulties many of rS34. Sf:F ` :' '- for more information the county's black tesi- F fir'e' denrs experience. And in fact, all African - Americans interviewed WE'RE MOVING TO A NEW LOCATION! experienced racist the open vitriol of 25 or 30 years ago has CLASSIC REALTY Better I largely disappeared. INC. 1 I aV Homes,,, I "Really what you still see are the ves- CALL 846 -8844 • FP:‘ tiges of segregation," says Brazos County O O Commissioner Carey Cawley, who also served as head of the local chapter of the In early February our new address will be: National Association for the Advancement Chimney Hill Retail Plaza o I • Chimney Hill H ilton of Colored People until rwo years ago. Old cc Plaza . rn H 1 habits die hard, he says, and what was 701 University Dr. East Suite 405 - inculcated over centuries hasn't been wiped ui College Station UNIVERSITY DRIVE N out by a few decades of relarive freedom: Conte see us for all your real estate needs! 1 " There 'sno one [white person] our here say - 18 INS!TEIPtbitunity 1997 . ..,, . . . . ._.... . _.. _ . 1 r . , , : , . . . r : ,...., _ . , . _(..: . ,,,,. ,,,,,,,,,,.. .. , ...:,,,.. lik ing, 'Here you have to do this, s spring showed that more than or you can't do that.' But this 70 percent of the residents is what you've been used to owned their own home. doing, and this is the way it's = Countywide census figures been, and no one's giving you show the majority of black a sense of hope of it being dif- ,it families — 60 percent — are fercnr. ' _ `. above the poverty line. What remains is the disas- Stereotype: Most black trots harvest of racial division: households receive at least huge economic disparity, pro- some public assistance, or found social separation, and : welfare. Truth: The majority persistent stereotypes held by of African Americans in both blacks and whites that Brazos County receive no wel- can keep even those who work fare at all. Figures from the with each other daily from state Department of Human understanding one another. Resources and the U.S. Census "America, and I'm not just Bureau indicate than as many speaking of Brazos County, has as 70 percent of black resi- not, in the words of Martin dents do not receive food Luther King, fulfilled its dream stamps, Aid to Families with or lived up to its potential," Dependent Children, or other says Jeffery Bailey Jr., who public assistance. grew up in Benchley and, after Lt. Johnson is also the a stint in the military, returned THIS GUY [A STORE EMPLOYEE] IS city's first African American to Brazos County in the early JUST FOLLOWING ME AROUND. WAS IT to hold elective office as a 1970s to launch a successful member of the school board. crocking company. BECAUSE I'M BLACK? I THINK SO. ... More than once he has been "And there's ample blame mistaken for a shoplifter. to go around, so we don't have THOSE KINDS OF THINGS HAPPEN. Repeating similar stories to point fingers. A lot of WHEN I TALK TO MY WHITE FRIENDS told by many African blacks have not lived up to Americans, Johnson says a fel- their capabilities, their poren- HERE ABOUT THAT THEY HAVE A HARD low police officer who worked tial. And a whole lot of whites as a security guard in his off - have not done what they could TIME UNDERSTANDING THAT. You CAN duty hours once told him that — morally or financially." GET MAD ABOUT IT, BUT YOU'D JUST BE a score owner had alerted security after Johnson walked 0 ne of the major MAD ALL THE TIME, AND BE ALL ANGRY in the store because he had causes of divi- assumed Johnson was there sion, as Bailey ABOUT EVERYTHING. only c steal. Then there was and many others the time when he went book - pointed out, are — LT. LARRY JOHNSON br poisonous "This guy la store employ - assumptions that both blacks Chief detective, College Station Police Departmen eel is just following me and whites believe about one around. Was it because I'm anorher. Here's what census data, crime reports, state agencies and black? I think so. Finally, after several minutes of this, with this taw enforcement officials say about the truth behind a few stereo- guy hiding behind the shelves and trying to follow me, I said, types about blacks: 'Sir, if you're going to follow me, why don't you help me find Stereotype: Most of those arrested in our area for the most what I'm looking for ?' violent crimes are black. Truth: Whites and Hispanics arrest- "He goes, 'Oh, I wasn't following you.' Well he'd been every- ed in Brazos County for violent crimes in 1995 outnumbered where I'd been for the lase 10 minutes. After a while I had played blacks rwo to one, according to state police reports. games with him; you know, 1'd go this way and see if he'd come Stereotype: Most of those who live in predominantly black too. It was obvious that he had been following me. And all I had neighborhoods are poor and do not own their homes. Truth: done was walk in through the door. Those kinds of things hap- An extensive survey by the neighborhood revitalization group, pen. When I talk to my white friends here about that, they have Project Unity, of the vast Carver -Kemp area in North Bryan last a hard time understanding that. You can ger mad about it, INSf1'E /Fi wuiAKY 1997 19 CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D. P.C. but you'd just be mad all the rime, and Doctor of Optometry be all angry about everything." 505 University Dr. East, Suite 101 A woman from North Bryan who was. College Station, Texas 77840 the first African American to be hired as a secretary in her department at Texas Most Serving A&M was unprepared for the stereotyping Insurance The Brazos she encounrered front fellow employees Plans t " Valley For when she started' work there several years Accepted Over ago. "I didn't think anybody had a problem --`-''V, 19 Years [with racial stereotypes] because I never CALL 846-0377 FOR APPOINTMENT experienced it before," says the women, MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY who is single, and did not want to be iden- rifled. "I have to go out of my way to ler We Have VERY COMPETITIVE PRICES On All Types these people know that no, 1 don't have of Contact Lenses — Tinted, Opaque Colors, i four or five children; yes, I did graduate Disposable, Toric, Gas Permeable, Etc. from high school; I didn't go to the uni- versity but I did go to business school; and WE BEAT HMO PRICES ON CONTACT LENSES I can read and write. CALL FOR OUR CURRENT SPECIALS "And I've seen people who I would say VISA ; Mc. rcord 111.1.111 WHILE THEY LAST don't have as much going for them as I do, but they don't have a problem [with stereotypes) because they're white." conta 1 i E 8, TOTAL COST C For Llglht or 1 lfter $40 Mail -In debate tit George Beckworth, an um i- es Available able former college baseball Dark E'i 20 More ▪ 12 Pair (4 Multipacs) Freshlook Disposable For $ - Clear Contact Lenses By Wesley-lessen player and neighborhood activist who spends a great • Exam, Follow -up & FREE Care Kit deal of time among youngsters in the Carver -Kemp area, would be the first to say char whites do _ in face incur problems with stereotypes o Q�i l [�O Binford Insect Control the African eCt ite s somecies tend of O W OQ ° 0 , O I Complete MEMBER racism and intentional discrimination in CON Pest & Termite cases where there may have been no actu- •,NS a CONTRO( NATIONAL al ill - will. I / C ontrol PEST ASSOCIATION "A for of the black kids that go into *76 i the classroom, they're already thinking, 'I'm not supposed co like white people.' Edward H. Binford It's not the fact that they don't really like This area's pest control ENTOMOLOGIST white people, it's that they hear their par- specialist for 50 years ents at home, mad and saying all this scuff. 822 -5524 • 1224 S. COLLEGE AVENUE • BRYAN Then [after] the first thing that happens in class, rhey'll say, Is she a racist because she don't like me ? "' And char preoccupation with possible racism, says Ronnie Jackson, youth services coordinator for the ciry of Bryan, is per- ' haps just as destructive as the real thing, • and ultimarely just as divisive. "Primarily for African Americans, News /Sports/Talk 1150 AM 2 l everything is abour race," says ,Jackson, who grew up in La Marque, a small town k' t ' between Galveston and Houston, and S P O S L "LIVE? arrived here about eight years ago. "It's with hard for us co see anything happening that ''{ isn't somewhere, in some kind of way, asso- � 1 '' Chip Howard dared with race. For white Americans, 5 °00 - 7'�® p.m. a y they don't have char orientation, so very 20 INSITE /Fettitunuy 1997 Few things are about race. * 6 One of the things that has to happen is that k have CO r educe this preoccupation with race to 13i'i clg iii gUlac s p p gap some extent, and whines have to increase their aware - ■ ness of race, and avoid their denial about race, so we , Si x steps people of all races can talk about ic." can take to promote healing T hat vast economic disparity exisrs here is beyond doubt. The 1990 census data shows, for example, the median income Despite the complexity of race relations and the profound nature of black families in Brazos County is less of our racial wounds, there is a number of commonplace, every - than half that of whites. Abour 40 per- day actions ordinary people can take co bridge the gap. Everyone, cent of local black Families are b elow the not just employers, school or city or law enforcement officials, leg - poverty line, compared with about 9 percent of white islators or policy makers, has a part to play to hasten the healing. families. While 35 percent of Anglo workers hold Here are some suggestions offered by Brazos County residents: professional or managerial jobs, only 16 percent of African Americans are employed at similar levels. 1. Take the time to get to know someone And while a similar division exists nationally, it is wider in Brazos County. Census figures show that of another race: in just about every measure of socioeconomic well- Jeffery Bailey, trucking company owner: "You'd be surprised being, African Americans here fare worse than how many white people will say they know a black man, and they African Americans in the state of Texas as a whole don't know him at all, because they only know him in a work sit - and in the nation as a whole. These measures include uation, or in passing." median family income, unemploymenr, percent of The Rev. Maurice Green, pastor: "Let's talk. Let's just sit families below the poverty line, high school gradua- down and talk. Get to know me. You'll find I'm an interesting Lion rares and the number holding professional and person. We may not be on the same economic level, but if we can managerial jobs. get together and communicate- and find out our likes and dislikes For example, according to the 1990 census, the — what kind of food do you like, where do you come from, or median income for Brazos County's black families whatever — we can learn something abour each ocher." was $14,400; for black families statewide, the median income stood at $20,613. Meanwhile, for 2. Invite a family of another race over for whites the situation was reversed. Sratewide medi- an family income was $35,080; in Brazos County, dinner: it was higher, $35,635. Another way ro look at it Rodney McFadden, cleaning business owner: "It's nice to is that black families in the state of Texas as a reach out. We have friends who have invited us over for dinner, whole earned a median income that is about 58 and we turned around and invited them to our home, and we've percent of what white families earned, but in had a great time with one another. That's the only way you're Brazos County they earned only 40 percent of what going to get to know a person, to really get the feel of a person, white families earned. is to invite them into your home." You can see a similar disparity in unemployment Carolyn Nobles, Brazos County extension agent: 'It's not as figures. The 1990 census shows an unemployment different as you'd think (ro be in the home of someone of anorh- rate for Brazos County blacks at 15.4 percent, tom er race). We all like nice Things. We all like to eat, we all wear pared with a statewide unemployment rare for blacks clothes. We have couches to sit on televisions, VCRs. I think we'd of 13.4 percent. At the same rime, however, the all be amazed at how alike we really are — more than how differ - unemployment rare for whites in Brazos County was ent we are. 4.6 percent, compared to a white statewide rate of 5.8 percent. 3. Ditch the stereotypes, and make a sin - Hispanic residents, who have been pouring into cere attempt to see someone of another race the county since 1970, and Asians, who began appearing in significant numbers in the 1980 census as a unique individual: reports, fare buret- in most categories in our county Carol McFadden, former Bryan school board member: rhan do African Americans, according CO the 1990 "We're all carrying around a lot of old baggage, a lot of miscon- census. ceptions about each other." And nowhere in the county is char economic gap Ella Donovan, former schoolteacher: "Thar is one of the wider than in the census tract on the southern bor- main problems with all of us — when you don't know somebody, der of Texas A &M Universiry. Abour six blocks you have a tendency to be in the negative about them." south of Kyle Field is the privately owned Carolyn Nobles: "[Blacks] have a serious prejudice too, and Southgate Apartments and a neighboring black it's because of our history, of looking at the white man as [there] community. Residents here are mostly retired just to do me in. 'IIe doesn't care if I succeed,' or He wants to sharecroppers, custodians ar Texas A &M and keep me down' — I get so sick of hearing char. ... If I had >- domestic workers, and their children and !NStTGFrukuakY 1997 21 thought that, I wouldn't be where I am today. ... It's a two -way grandchildren. Census figures suggest and city offi- rhing. We both need CO change our mentality." cials agree that possibly the most concentrated and Lonnie Stabler, Bryan mayor: You basically have to forget debilitating poverty in the entire county can be what you know, you have to forger what you've been taught, and found here. you have to try to put yourself in their situation and their place and In this predominantly black neighborhood, the sometimes it's difficult, I don't know that I always do it, but I try," median annual family income is $7,000. Seventy- seven percent of the black residents are below the 4. Show sensitivity and courtesy about say- poverty line. Residents living in the nearby, large- ly white neighborhood bordering George Bush in or displaying things that can cause some- Drive, recently designated as "College Station one of another race intense discomfort: The Sourhside Historic Area," have a median family Confederate flag, for example, is a symbol to income of X540,000, well above the area's median for whites. many African Americans of a slave society, and Sunny Nash, a writer and photographer who grew up in one of Bryan's most dilapidated neigh - its display can cause deep resentment and pain. Gerome Bonner, Texas A &M engineering student: "Self -seg- borhoods, Candy Hill, recently published a mem- regation is not just the non - minorities' fault, it's the minorities' fault oir of her childhood, Big Ildvmn/u Didn't Shop at also. At lunch we eat with ourselves. But it's real hard to sit and 1l ✓ooleaort /J'1. Several years ago she paid a visit to an eat lunch by someone with a Confederate flag on the back of their aspiring poet who lived in Southgate and who T- shirt, that says, The South will rise again.' There's a whole lot of wanted Nash to evaluate her writing. Nash was that going on, and it's hard for us to just smile and eat with them appalled at the environment in which this woman and be happy -go -lucky all the time.... You see it on bumper stick- lived. ers. It's really a problem. It's just dividing, big - time." "I don't know how in the world she could write," she recalls, "with all that noise, and babies crying, and people screaming obscenities at each other, and 5. If you are white, take the time to read a j ust hanging out all over the place, cars going up book about race relations, or magazines that and down. When I got our there, I was afraid to get highlight the accomplishments and points of out of my car. It's like North Bryan — they have been conditioned to have nothing, and when condi- view of African- Americans and Hispanics: cloning goes through generations, it gets stronger. Carolyn Nobles: "If a person really wants to change, they're And when they've been conditioned to have nothing, going to do something on their own to improve their knowledge. and have no hope of ever having anything, they set - If I really want to change my attitude about a person, I'm going to rle. They settle for that situation." start be either adopting a friend who is nor like me, or I'm going to read literature, and literature that's more factual and not just arsico agrees: "If you look at Brazos something that sells.... Buy a black Enterprise magazine. You'd be County, you will find that many of amazed at businesses that blacks have started or been in, or [who the people who are on the lower are] CEOs. We never see that part of our society." income levels are the descendants of individuals who were engaged in 6. Visit a church attended primarily by agriculture or very difficult physical labor that's no longer required. So what do they do? people of a different race: What can they do? They have no skills, and we're Carolyn Nobles: "Make that first effort. Go to a black church living with that. if you've never been before." Most of the people I met who used to be share - Rick Larsen, attorney: "Cross those lines to worship at your croppers worked a hell of a lot harder than other brother's congregation. There's huge power [for reconciliation and people I knew, but their jobs were made obsolete. friendship] in that. Huge power." ... Set chose people loose from their economic base Maurice Green: "Churches can fellowship together. One time I without any transition — that's what were trying took my congregation to Aldersgate [United Methodist Church], to cope with and crying to find our way around all and my choir. We went in, and I ministered. ... We have a for of this time. pastors [of different races] who involve themselves in a prayer group, "We're living with the fact that this system has but unfortunately it doesn't filter into the churches, where we could been created, and now ir's economic, and they can't come together in a mass fellowship." find a way out." Dr. Marilyn Kern - Foxworth, journalism professor: "When I Nash is flooded with discouragement whenever wake up in the year 2000, and I go to church and there are a lot of she comes home from California to visit her Bryan white people in my church, or I go to a whine church and there a neighborhood, despite some physical improvements lot of black people there, [if] we have a for of little microcosms of in housing conditions and in the general appearance Aldersgate all over the city, that's when well know were at the level of the area. As in countless cities across the nation, we want to be. That's one way of gauging how far we've really cone." from St. Petersburg to Pittsburgh to couch- central – Cindy Neeelt Los Angeles, economic and b psychological wounds 22 INSITEIPeak 1997 £ Y: k A v inflicted on this community `'. to use toward building a coin- generations ago have neve, .1, munity center in her long - healed. They continue to fes- , neglected neighborhood. ter, carrying over from one y, 1 Casrle Heights sits on the generation to another. d " ., far eastern edge of the city of "I don't believe people's . ' . Bryan, a lone outpost divided lives have really and truly from the rest on the city by improved," she says. "People Highway 6. This is a neigh - who live in the Candy Hill _ borhood of more than 300 neighborhood, people who live j residents who made do with in north Bryan, on the west f �,� '• v " ? outhouses until the early ° side or the east side, or in • s � ; 1970s when the city extend - some of the outlying areas like * t . j., ed sewer lines. Until then, the Castle Heights area, their = v j municipal services consisted lives have not improved rhac i ` ,, of a city truck that came much. Their incomes have nor . 1 i through regularly to pour kept up with everybody else's "" `'' 'k• lime down everyone's outdoor incomes. There are still very toilers. few opportunities here for When White returned to young black people. her childhood home last year "I think a lot of them have after 26 years of traveling the come to the conclusion that if j world with her military bus - there's no opportunity for band, she was outraged. The them, then why even try! ... ` BLACKS WERE FORCED TO COlMI- outhouses were gone, the The key word to the whole streets had been paved, but lit - thing of survival is hope. If PETE WITH STUDENTS FOR JOBS. ... tle else in the virtually 100 you have hope that you can S OME [BLACK] HIGH SCHOOL KID GETS percent African American survive, then you will make a neighborhood had changed. way to survive, because you OUT FOR THE SUMMER AND WANTS TO And after having seen what life have some kind of light some- was like beyond the borders of where down the road. You can GO TO WORK FOR [FAST -FOOD RESTAU- Brazos County, White decided see it, you know where you're RANTS] . PEOPLE WILL LOOK AT THE ro speak up. That's putting it going. mildly. ' But when the light is our, 17 YEAR -OLD KID WHO HAS NO WORK Although the city was and the hope is gone, then AND THEY ALSO GOT A eventually responsive to HISTORY people just don't try anymore. many of her concerns, it was They actually give up. They 2O -YEAR -OLD A &M SOPHOMORE. not without something of a throw up borh their hands, fight on her parr. Her they'll do anything. They WHO ARE THEY GOING TO PICK? 1 weapons were old city maps, don't care about other people's historical facts and statistics property, because they don't -DALE MARSICO of all kinds. One of her first have any; they don't feel like projecrs was to rake an exren- they'll ever have any. They Former head, Brazos Valley Community Action Agency sive survey of the neighbor - don'r care about their physical hood co find our exactly how bodies, because rhey take drugs, they drink — why try to take many residents lived there, the racial mix, the income levels, care of the body, why try to do anything right if none of rhac is the jobs they hold, and so forth. going co make your life better ?" When I go in [to speak with city officials]," she told a class of Texas A &M sociology undergraduates who took a field trip WHERE WE'RE HEADED our ro meet her last fall, "I'm loaded for bear." First she asked for sidewalks. Then she wanted the waisr -high o understand where Brazos County could be headed, con- weeds along the roadways and empty lots cut. Next it was park T sider spending time some afternoon in the Castle 1-Ieights maintenance. Finally, she asked for the Brazos Transit System bus Park with Caroline Whire, a cheerful, self - described route to be extended to the far east end of Castle I-leights. That's "hell - raiser" with a deep and throaty laugh, who landed where transir officials drew the line. a $25,000 federal Community Development Block Grant They cold her no way — the far end of Casrle Heights was INStTEIFrnnuARv 1 997 23 ■ outside the city limits. ' 7Iute j '51 the university system and its came back with "yes way," and surrounding communities that produced a 1955 plat of the - a will enable the expertise and city that clearly showed all of " �' knowledge reaped from count- Castle Heights inside the city less research projects and pro- limits. , . , grams co benefit the local area "Then they explained ro me k directly. that the roads were coo bad for the trolley to come our here. I said, 'Okay, then you're telling hat all this me the school bus, die yellow means for school bus that picks our kids race rela- up, can go up and down all of 1[ �;.i � dons is that these streets every day, and the the African trolley can't because the trolley ., s A m e r i c a n is more important to you than t -I community, which until now the school kids ?' I G 11 = ' 1 1 has been bypassed by the "They didn't like that, so l f ' explosive growth of the rest ex F ve tS they gave me some explana- f> 4.6;71: x; of the county, may have an Lion why the trolley needs to `1 5 fi unprecedented opportunity to do this and die trolley needs 3 be heard and seen — to end ro do that, and it all boiled '' what has been dubbed "the down co a bunch of malarkey. invisibility factor," which Bur now [Brazos] Transit ` WHEN I GO IN [TO SPEAK TO many readily concede has comes out here, I think, every been partially self - inflicted 40 minutes." CITY OFFICIALS , I'M LOADED FOR through generational fear and BEAR. deep feelings of intimidation. A c about the same "I don't think government time White was can heal any wounds that peo- discovering the — CAROLINE WHITE ple have, but certainly gov- joys of neighbor- hood activism, Castle Heights community activist ernment can set an example," says Bryan Mayor Lonnie another neighbor- Stabler. hood -based group was raising its collective voice on the western "The doors are open now," says Ronnie Jackson, Bryan youth end of the city. Project Unity, as the effort became known, is a services coordinator, who has repeatedly urged groups such as partnership of community residents, government, charitable groups the NAACP and others, particularly church leaders, in the black and businesses whose focus is ro revitalize the Carver -hemp area, community to overcome widespread disunity and historic reluc- as well as provide leadership for similar efforts elsewhere in the Lance to make noise, to be persistent and active in pushing for county. change. "This is a window of opportunity. If you don't do any - Meanwhile, seismic shifts have occurred in local government thing, if you don't move on it, the door will close. Ir may be in recent years. Among other changes, Bryan is finishing a grad- another 10 years before it will open again." ual switch to single - member districts in both its school board and Others, however, argue that no matter how many governmen- city council, enabling areas of the city that heretofore had no par- cal and institutional doors are open, and no matter how many titular voice or representation to speak up. Three of the seven neighborhood activists push for revitalization of their communi- members of city council are minorities — two blacks and one ty, real healing of racial division — of the "age -old wounds" of Hispanic. which the Rev. Maurice Green spoke — will nor rake place until College Station schools, in hiring its first black administrator, a significant number of people change Their attitudes about one started at the cop with Superintendent Jinn Scales. Voters put another. African American Larry Johnson on the school board in 1995, Carolyn Nobles, a county extension agent, often wonders if the and recently Major Lynn Mcllhaney has held community meet- frequent invitations she receives to serve on various boards and ings and open breakfasts in a deliberate attempt to solicit citizen commission are not in fact mere tokenism, rather than repre- input. senting a rrue change of heart. And, coincidentally, the new chancellor of the Texas A &M "If I come to you and say I really want you to be on this University System, Barry Thompson, has created a "community board bur I haven't changed my attitudes or my image of you, development initiative," a new attempt to build bridges between then we're still at square one, because it's just going through 24 1NSITE /Ftanumty 1997 the motions," she says. "God made all of Where • • • us, and we're all made from the same dust of the earth. How can one clump of i lust think it's better than another ! 7 An Atmosphere Perfect to Create New Ideas? lump ?" 4 A nd t he church community is ' , �; A Way to Escape Brazos County's one best �► '� Interrupting Phone Calls? hope for changing those atti- !, 1 . .� I lutes, Green says, echoing • o ` sentiments expressed by 1 AMeetingPlanner's Best Friend? many others. It's the one ! � `� • 1 place, he says, where deeply divided cit- izens — whose perceptions and under- A Great Place standing have been poisoned by stereo- types, who have been embittered by eco- ' • nomic inequities and wounded by racism e to Meet — can at last reconcile. "The church is where it should hap- pen," he says. "If it doesn't happen there, Your assignment is to plan theperfect business meeting, seminar, banquet or wedding. the bit about love your neighbor, loving Allow us to attend to your every detail. Anticipating your needs. Eliminating the hassles. one another, is all farce. ... If we're just Catering services offer tantalizing meals and delectable buffets, all based on your specifica- going to church without an understand lions. Spacious one and two bedroom suites with iNL ing of the needs of our neighbor that we Gulf -view balcony feature separate living areas. pass by on the side of the road, we Sparkling swimming pools, whirlpools and more 1 4 await your leisure. become hypocrites. We're just going through the motions." 1-800-231-6363 & CONFERENCE CENTER Dr. Marilyn Kern - Foxworth, an as 6301? Seawall boulevard •Galveston, Texas i s ciate professor of journalism at Texas A &M, says she has seen true racial ',regress, up close and personal, ar lldrrsgare United Methodist Church, The perfect where substantial numbers of blacks, whites, Hispanics and Asians worship together regularly. It was particularly Valentine evident, she said, during the funeral of Trina Rigsby, a much -loved African American librarian at the predominantly 1 f t .,. white Brazos Christian School, who died of cancer in September. YOU! She had one of the most integrated ! v funerals I've ever seen in my life," Kern- i t Foxworth recalls. "It was one of the best. - You had white people talking about how eg<aW� good Trina was there were black people `' there, and everyone saw her as a person." "" � Green insists: The only thing thar -, . _ can really heal us is the church. Nor , �: • B/W 52551011 church in the sense of visible structures; the church in the sense of the evangeli- • 5x7 "Movie Star" B/W Portrait cal outreach of God to help fallen man. ,,. , If Christ doesn't do ir in you it's all in vain. This is what Christ died for Ir s, goes deeper than mere integration; we've � . • •r•• :r• ,rc gor integrated schools bur we still have division. Call Gloria "We can do it rogether. All we have to ! for more information do is heal the hurt. ... But for whatever d, $46 -2174 eason, we all feel like it's not our respon- $ .,ibility. We have a serious problem. What 3601 E. 29th Street, Suite 11 are we going CO do about ir?" Tuts. -Fri. 9 -6, Sat. 9 -12 INS/TE!t utu_ARY 1997 25