Lecture includes Carrie Williams Story

On May 23rd at the Cottrill Opera House, guest lecturer Tom Rodd told stories from notable cases in Tucker County’s legal history. The historic space of the former theater made a great venue, and we want to thank the ArtSpring team for letting us use the space.

One of the key cases covered was Williams vs. Board of Education, which centered around the Coketon Colored School, located just outside of Thomas. Carrie Williams, the teacher at the school, sued the local Board of Education over the fact that African American students were given a significantly shorter school year than white students. Williams continued to teach the full year, going without pay for three months to make sure her students got a good education and prove a point to the County. She was represented successfully in court by J.R. Clifford, West Virginia’s first African American attorney. The case went all the way to the state Supreme Court and set the precedent that all students in West Virginia must receive the same education, regardless of race.

As part of the presentation, the audience got to read passages from the original court decision, and were surprised by some of the progressive ideas about the importance of education and fair treatment that were around even back in the 1890s. In the past, Friends of Blackwater has put on play’s reenacting Carrie William’s trial, and some photos of those events were part of the presentation, including a couple of cameos from audience members who had participated in the reenactment in Parsons. Thank you to everyone who attended our event!

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Justice Larry Starcher, a Founder of the J.R. Clifford Project, Has Died in Morgantown

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JR Clifford celebrated in WV Lawyer