Price Public Elementary School | |
Location | Hasson and Spring Sts., Rogersville, Tennessee |
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Coordinates | 36°24′34″N83°0′32″W / 36.40944°N 83.00889°W Coordinates: 36°24′34″N83°0′32″W / 36.40944°N 83.00889°W |
Area | less than one acre |
Built | 1923 |
NRHP reference No. | 88002538 [1] |
Added to NRHP | November 10, 1988 |
Price Public Elementary School, now known as Price Public Community Center and Swift Museum, is a former African-American school in Rogersville, Tennessee. It currently serves as a community center and home of the Swift Museum.
The site of the school was dedicated to African-American education in 1868, when Alexander Fain, Jordan Netherland, Albert Jones and Nathaniel Mitchell bought the land "for the purpose of building a schoolhouse for the education of colored children." A schoolhouse was built and used until the early 1900s. The current building replaced it in 1922. [2]
Price School operated until 1958, when it closed and its students were transferred to Swift High School, which was converted from a high school to a grade K-12 school. [3] When integration took place in Rogersville, during the 1960s, the city's African-American elementary school students were transferred to Rogersville City School, also a K-8 institution. The Price School building was subsequently used as a cannery, a community center, and a storage building, [2] then was abandoned and became run-down.
The school was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. [1]
The building underwent a restoration beginning in the mid-1990s as a result of cooperative efforts between the town, the local African-American community, the local American Legion Auxiliary, the Chamber of Commerce, the Rogersville Heritage Association, and other civic organizations. [3] The project was aided by a rural development grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. [2] Following restoration, in 2003 the Price Public Community Center opened in the building. [2] The Swift Museum in the center opened to the public in 2008. [4] The community center and museum offer resources for learning and teaching about African-American history and culture. [2] [3]
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