"The Black Experience in Oak Ridge" is the topic of a special service
at 10 a.m. Sunday at the Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church, 1500 Oak Ridge
Turnpike.
Three speakers, LaVada Chisholm, Jackie Holloway and Alfred Stephens, each
bringing a different point of view, will talk about what it has been like to be
a black Oak Ridger.
The service was coordinated by Ida Coveyou and Diantha Paré.
Chisholm came to Oak Ridge in 1944 as an 18-year-old high school graduate
from Murfreesboro. Trained as a beauty operator, she worked in the segregated
hutment area of Oak Ridge.
After the war she got her degree at Knoxville College, and she recently
retired as a teacher with the Knox County schools.
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Stephens
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Holloway, a member of the Anderson County Commission, arrived in 1956. She and
LaVada Chisholm were determined to have their children go to integrated schools,
and managed to get their girls included among the first 11 children entering the
integrated Oak Ridge elementary schools.
Recently retired from Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Holloway is a former
member of the board of the United Way of Anderson County and has been designated
"The Children's Champion" in the Success By Six Initiative.
Stephens was born in 1960 to civil rights activists Kathleen and Nelson
Stephens. He attended the segregated Scarboro Elementary School until third
grade, when he transferred to Cedar Hill.
He attended the University of Tennessee and is now an air traffic controller
at McGhee Tyson Airport in Knoxville.
When Oak Ridge was founded in 1943, an architectural firm designed the houses
and street plan, calling for neighborhoods, each with its own stores and school.
A "Negro village" was included where East Village is now. The
population, originally expected to peak at 25,000, grew to 75,000 by the spring
of 1945. There was a desperate need for housing of any sort as soon as possible.
Black workers from Mississippi and Alabama, many illiterate, were recruited
as janitors, maids, and manual laborers for wages that seemed remarkably high.
Transported to Oak Ridge in trucks, they were settled in the
"hutments" where home was a 16- by 16-foot room with four beds and a
coal stove in the center. Bathhouses provided the only sanitary facilities.
Not only was there no privacy, children were not permitted, women were kept
behind a guarded fence, and there was a curfew. Men lived in separate hutments
and were not permitted on Oak Ridge streets at night. The residents felt anger,
frustration and helplessness, resulting in violence, theft, and fear of physical
harm.
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Holloway
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In 1945, the segregated community of Scarboro was built to provide improved
housing. Blacks still could not use the public library or the same water
fountains, go to restaurants, the swimming pool or movies, and had to sit in the
back of the bus.
A school for black children, set up in 1945 by Robert Officer and his wife,
ended in ninth grade, so high school students had to be bused to Austin East in
Knoxville.
Many Oak Ridgers, black and white, worked together to improve conditions. A
volunteer high school was created that allowed students to stay in town until
the Oak Ridge schools were integrated.
Ida Coveyou and Marie Anthony ran an adult evening school. A Colored Camp
Council in the hutments lobbied to improve conditions. Later the Community
Relations Council, Congress on Racial Equality, the Oak Ridge Federation for
Equal Public Services, and many individuals picketed and worked to desegregate
housing and other public services.
The City Council set up a Human Resources Advisory Board. The Principles and
Purposes of the Unitarian Universalist Association affirm and promote "the
inherent worth and dignity of every person" and underscore the importance
of "justice, equity and compassion in human relations."
Many members of this church worked tirelessly to help accomplish those
efforts.
Members, friends and guests are invited to a special social hour after the
service to celebrate "Everybody's Birthday."
For more information about the church, call 483-6761 between 9 a.m. and 3
p.m. on weekdays, or visit the Web site at www.korrnet.org/oruuc.
The e-mail address is Oruuc@aol.com
Caryl Kaplan is a publicist for the Oak Ridge Unitarian Universalist Church.