N. A. Banks Elementary School
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 31° 45.120 W 095° 38.320
15R E 250055 N 3515977
Texas Historical Marker at the southeast corner of the intersection of W Dye and S Jackson Streets in Palestine, providing some history of the African-American school that occupied this site until it was bulldozed in the 1980s.
Waymark Code: WM148J5
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 05/16/2021
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member QuesterMark
Views: 5

Marker Number: 15919

Marker Text:
Established in 1912, N.A. Banks Elementary School served African-American children of Palestine's South End community. Initially the school served grades one through four and was named for the principle of Palestine's Lincoln High School. Nathaniel A. Banks (1854-1930) had great influence on the African-American community of Palestine, serving as Lincoln High School principal from 1898 to 1907. He also organized the area's Colored Summer Normal School, which prepared African-American teachers in ten surrounding counties for the State Teaching Certification Exam. Hundreds attended each summer from 1899 until about 1919, even after Banks left Palestine and the teaching profession to become a farmer.

The Banks School was a two-story brick building with four classrooms. When it opened, it was the first elementary school for African-American students living south of the I&GN railroad tracks in Palestine. J.A.B. Strain was the first principal. He and teachers Alma Johnson-Stein, Leonora Howard-Robinson and Louise Scott-Updack each taught here for more than 35 years. The school added fifth and sixth grades and additional teachers in 1949, though in 1953 these grades moved to the Lincoln High School campus when the new A.M. Story High School opened. Twice a year, the school hosted meetings of the City Teachers' Association, an organization of African-American teachers. In May 1965, the Palestine School Board closed Banks School in accordance with desegregation guidelines. The facility operated as the Palestine Kindergarten Center under the federally-funded Headstart Program for an additional five years. The building was razed in the early 1980s. Today Banks School is remembered as the educational foundation for many in Palestine and a source of community pride. (2009) Marker is Property of the State of Texas



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