Paris, Tennessee/External Links: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Pat Palmer
mNo edit summary
(Slaves in Henry County, TN with names of owners from wills 1848-1864)
 
Line 26: Line 26:
* ''<span class="newtab">[https://www.parispi.net/news/local_news/article_a61a0d23-12e8-593c-9935-3fa982829540.html Paris TN: Former Central High School building demolished on Rison St ]</span>, in The Paris Post-Intelligencer (online) from Jun 16, 2010 Updated Feb 16, 2014; last access 7/4/2021.
* ''<span class="newtab">[https://www.parispi.net/news/local_news/article_a61a0d23-12e8-593c-9935-3fa982829540.html Paris TN: Former Central High School building demolished on Rison St ]</span>, in The Paris Post-Intelligencer (online) from Jun 16, 2010 Updated Feb 16, 2014; last access 7/4/2021.
* ''<span class="newtab">[https://www.parispi.net/news/local_news/article_64f8f731-90cb-52d6-a8bf-1530d7a566b4.html  1969: Henry County High School era begins: Effort to build school was tough four-year battle]</span>, in The Paris Post-Intelligencer (online) from Aug 27, 2009; last access 7/4/2021.  NOTE from [[User talk:Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer]]: Nowhere in this article is the issue of school desegregation mentioned, but as I recall from discussions all over town in my childhood, the soon-to-be-mandated desegration of all schools was '''the primary''' issue which drove this effort.  Had the county not consolidated all schools into one high school in the center, the county would have faced legally mandated busing.  As I recall it, a majority of white people preferred building a brand new school which would include all the black kids rather than possibly face needing to send their own kids to a formerly all-black school, which everyone believed (most likely wrongly) to be inferior but which definitely had less funding available to it.  The building of the new high school, which opened in 1970, avoided the need for racially motivated busing, but required all students from outer areas to be transported to the center of the county each day for high school--all without regard to race.
* ''<span class="newtab">[https://www.parispi.net/news/local_news/article_64f8f731-90cb-52d6-a8bf-1530d7a566b4.html  1969: Henry County High School era begins: Effort to build school was tough four-year battle]</span>, in The Paris Post-Intelligencer (online) from Aug 27, 2009; last access 7/4/2021.  NOTE from [[User talk:Pat Palmer|Pat Palmer]]: Nowhere in this article is the issue of school desegregation mentioned, but as I recall from discussions all over town in my childhood, the soon-to-be-mandated desegration of all schools was '''the primary''' issue which drove this effort.  Had the county not consolidated all schools into one high school in the center, the county would have faced legally mandated busing.  As I recall it, a majority of white people preferred building a brand new school which would include all the black kids rather than possibly face needing to send their own kids to a formerly all-black school, which everyone believed (most likely wrongly) to be inferior but which definitely had less funding available to it.  The building of the new high school, which opened in 1970, avoided the need for racially motivated busing, but required all students from outer areas to be transported to the center of the county each day for high school--all without regard to race.
== Slavery ==
* ''[https://www.ancestry.com/boards/topics.ethnic.afam.tn/207 Slaves in Henry County, TN with names of owners from wills 1848-1864]'' from the Message Boards on Ancestry.com, posted 09 Dec 2007 10:48 PM.  A user (now anonymous) did this research and posted it; the information could be verified for someone with online access to the wills, or who owned some of the books about wills which have been published.  In a comment, this user claims to have scraped this information from books.

Latest revision as of 08:25, 22 June 2022

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
A hand-picked, annotated list of Web resources about Paris, Tennessee.
Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner and consider archiving the URLs behind the links you provide. See also related web sources.

Current


Historical

Scholarly journals

Newspapers and media

Other

  • Henry County on Collaborative Genealogy and History - The map here shows how the southeast border of the county used to be the Big Sandy river, before TVA rerouted that river in the 1930's, turning it into a straight-cut ditch instead of the meandering river it had been before. Compare the county's SE border with the current route of the Big Sandy river.

School history, desegregation and consolidation

  • African-American High Schools Now Long Gone, in The Tennessee Magazine (online), last access July 4, 2021.
  • Paris TN: Former Central High School building demolished on Rison St , in The Paris Post-Intelligencer (online) from Jun 16, 2010 Updated Feb 16, 2014; last access 7/4/2021.
  • 1969: Henry County High School era begins: Effort to build school was tough four-year battle, in The Paris Post-Intelligencer (online) from Aug 27, 2009; last access 7/4/2021. NOTE from Pat Palmer: Nowhere in this article is the issue of school desegregation mentioned, but as I recall from discussions all over town in my childhood, the soon-to-be-mandated desegration of all schools was the primary issue which drove this effort. Had the county not consolidated all schools into one high school in the center, the county would have faced legally mandated busing. As I recall it, a majority of white people preferred building a brand new school which would include all the black kids rather than possibly face needing to send their own kids to a formerly all-black school, which everyone believed (most likely wrongly) to be inferior but which definitely had less funding available to it. The building of the new high school, which opened in 1970, avoided the need for racially motivated busing, but required all students from outer areas to be transported to the center of the county each day for high school--all without regard to race.

Slavery

  • Slaves in Henry County, TN with names of owners from wills 1848-1864 from the Message Boards on Ancestry.com, posted 09 Dec 2007 10:48 PM. A user (now anonymous) did this research and posted it; the information could be verified for someone with online access to the wills, or who owned some of the books about wills which have been published. In a comment, this user claims to have scraped this information from books.