February 2020 | DC Beacon

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VOL.32, NO.2

Preserving local black history

FEBRUARY 2020

I N S I D E …

PHOTO BY GLENDA C. BOOTH

By Glenda C. Booth The little half-acre cemetery with 75 graves, in the shadow of a five-story office building with shiny turquoise windows, is barely visible to drivers whizzing by on Fairfax County’s six-lane Beulah Street. Cement tombstones with hand-lettered inscriptions have been worn down by time. On one, the name “Moses Harris” is barely legible. Another, bearing a cross, notes the passing of “Mr. Edgar Harris, BORN May 15th 1876 and DIED May 19th 1961.” Much of Northern Virginia’s history has been paved and built over by ever-expanding development. But several residents are determined to not allow time and neglect to conceal the scars and successes of the area’s African Americans. “We must remember those who made today possible,” said Phyllis Walker Ford, director of the Laurel Grove School Museum, which is housed in the only surviving “colored” one-room schoolhouse in Northern Virginia, next to the cemetery.

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L E I S U R E & T R AV E L

Biking through beautiful and historic parts of the Netherlands; plus, NYC’s Chelsea Hotel, and how to detect and avoid common scams page 43

Segregated school endured The white wooden building, once flanked by a laurel grove, is an anachronism today next to Franconia’s MetroPark commercial complex. Built in 1884, it sits on land owned by Ford’s formerly enslaved great grandparents, William and Georgianna Jasper. When Jasper was granted freedom in 1846, Ford said, “He purchased land less than two miles from where he was enslaved. Whites and blacks lived side by side and got along.” Ford’s ancestors deeded the land to the Fairfax County school district for purposes of building a school. But the county didn’t build the school; local African-American families did.

ARTS & STYLE

A Thousand Splendid Suns at Arena State tells a powerful tale of female bonds; plus, the inside scoop from a veteran reporter, and Bob Levey on the delights of loose change Phyllis Walker Ford’s ancestors donated the land to build the Laurel Grove School, now a museum in Fairfax County, Virginia. Ford is the director of the museum, and her ancestors are buried in a cemetery nearby.

Fairfax County, which supplied one cord of wood per year to the school, closed it in 1933 and auctioned its contents. In 2000, the Jaspers’ descendants sold the remain-

ing 13 acres to the Fried Companies to build MetroPark. See BLACK HISTORY, page 54

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