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CMS Will Strip Segregationist Governor's Name From Vance High

CMS

Zebulon Vance was a Confederate general, a slaveholder, a North Carolina governor and a U.S. senator -- but he won't be the namesake for a Charlotte-Mecklenburg high school much longer.

CMS board Chair Elyse Dashew posted on Facebook Wednesday that the board will take up plans to rename Vance High at its Tuesday meeting. 

"It is time for a new name for Zebulon B. Vance High School. Beyond time, in fact," Dashew wrote.

A majority of board members told WFAE they support renaming the school.

Dashew shared a link to a piece written by CMS teacher and education blogger Justin Parmenter, which dubs Vance "North Carolina's favorite white supremacist" and details his history of owning enslaved people, resisting racial integration and disparaging African Americans.

The move to rename Vance High comes amid a national outcry over police brutality and deep-seated racism. Across the nation, there's a push to remove Confederate monuments and rename public facilities honoring white supremacists.

Credit Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
Zebulon Vance

Vance opened in 1997 as part of the "Governors' Village" cluster of schools in the UNC Charlotte area of northeast Charlotte. That campus included James Martin MIddle School and elementary schools named for John M. Morehead and Nathaniel Alexander. Morehead and Alexander were recently merged to form Governors' Village STEM Academy, a K-8 school.

Vance High's enrollment the past school year was 58% black, 34% Hispanic, 3% white and 2% Asian.

Dashew's post says the board plans to review the names of other school buildings and to launch a renaming process for Vance that will include the community.

"Renaming a school is symbolic. Symbols are important," Dashew wrote. "But SYMBOLS must be followed up with ACTION — to reduce inequities, opportunity gaps, and racism." 

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Ann Doss Helms has covered education in the Charlotte area for over 20 years, first at The Charlotte Observer and then at WFAE. Reach her at ahelms@wfae.org or 704-926-3859.