Posted on 11/20/2019 6:42:28 PM PST by ConservativeStatement
After a lengthy and at times emotionally-charged process Brookline Town Meeting voted Wednesday to rename the Coolidge Corner School for activist, journalist and educator Florida Ruffin Ridley.
The renaming process has been in the works since Town Meeting voted in 2018 to change the name of the former Devotion School, recognizing namesake Edward Devotions slave ownership.
The student renaming committee, the Bee-lievers of Change, narrowed down a list of community nominations and eventually selected Ridley, who passed away in 1943.
(Excerpt) Read more at brookline.wickedlocal.com ...
Florida sounds like an interesting person, but she is not in the same league as a US President. Especially one with the personal rectitude of Silent Cal.
Biographical Sketch of Florida Ruffin Ridley, 1861-1943
Biographical Database of Black Woman Suffragists
Biographical Sketch of Florida Ruffin Ridley, 1861-1943
By Talia Sharpp, undergraduate student, Hampton University
Florida Ruffin was born to Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin and George Lewis Ruffin, both prominent figures in Boston society, in 1861. George Lewis Ruffin, a native of Richmond, Virginia, was the first African American to graduate from Harvard Law School; he later became the Charlestown Municipal Court Judge, and was a member of the Massachusetts Legislature and the Boston Common Council. Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin was an abolitionist, anti-lynching crusader, club leader, editor, feminist, suffragist, and orator. Florida Ruffin was one of four children born to Josephine St. Pierre and George Lewis Ruffin. As evidenced by her parents’ many accomplishments, the Ruffin household greatly valued education, social justice, and civic engagement.
Florida Ruffin followed the examples set forth by her parents by graduating from Boston Teacher’s College and Boston University, and becoming the second African American school teacher in the Boston Public Schools. Ruffin thrived in her career as an educator up until 1888, when she married Ulysses A. Ridley, a successful tailor in the city. Florida Ruffin Ridley and her husband settled in Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1896, where they raised two children, Constance and Ulysses A. Ridley, Jr. The couple is recognized as the first African American homeowners in the town of Brookline, where they were also long-time members of the Second Unitarian Church.
Ridley was not your average society woman. Under her mother, Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, Ridley served as editor of The Women’s Era newspaper, recognized as the first newspaper to be owned, managed, and published by African American women. The Women’s Era was the official journal of the Colored Women’s League, which would later merge into the National Association of Colored Women (NACW). Ridley worked very closely with her mother in their professional pursuits, and the two also collaborated to found the League of Women for Community Service. Separately, Ridley forged her own path as a club woman, civil rights activist, essayist, and journalist through her various publications on race relations in New England and the founding of the Society of the Descendants of Early New England Negroes. It was Ridley’s hope that through her work she could utilize her passion for history to enhance her understanding of the issues surrounding social justice. Evident in the membership that Ridley also held in the Twentieth Century Club and the Women’s City Club of Boston, both predominantly white clubs, was her belief that both races deserved an equal place in society.
Florida Ruffin Ridley died in her daughter’s Ohio home on February 25, 1943. Her home still stands, and is a stop on the Boston Women’s Heritage Trail.
Coolidge Corner is a section of Brookline where JFK was born. The previous name of the school was Devotion.
I figured something like that when I checked a map. Note there is a Packard Corner also.
Looking over the other contenders I see an anarcho-Communist and an anti-Communist (who was also anti-Fascist and anti-NAZI).
https://www.renamedevo.com/your-suggestions
Since they are renaming things slave owners and slave traders had named after them, isn’t it about time for the Left to ban the Beatles’ song Penny Lane?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/liverpool/content/articles/2007/02/15/abolition_penny_lane_feature.shtml
“The street made famous in song by The Beatles is named after a Liverpool slave ship owner and anti-abolitionist.”
...In July 2006 a Liverpool councillor Barbara Mace proposed that streets named after slave traders should be renamed.
The plan was criticised by those who argued the negative parts of history should not be “airbrushed” and was later withdrawn.
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