
By
the early twentieth century black schoolchildren in Fayetteville
had been attending classes in small, usually one-room, schoolhouses
for nearly 50 years. A building program in 1911 had financed
three all-brick schools for white children. In 1915 the town
appropriated funds for a two-story brick structure for black
children. "The handsome new building" opened on
Orange Street that year. A year later, the school reported
853 pupils enrolled, with more than 500 in daily attendance.
The building served in this capacity for 38 years. Professor
Edward Evans (1863-1943), whose home is across Orange Street
from the school, was associated with the school for its entire
existence. The first E.E. Smith High School was located there
in 1927. Orange Street School is the oldest existing structure
in the city associated with public schooling. |