Current:Home > reviewsClose friendship leads to celebration of "Brunswick 15" who desegregated Virginia school -NextFrontier Finance
Close friendship leads to celebration of "Brunswick 15" who desegregated Virginia school
View
Date:2025-04-13 13:07:02
If you ask Marvin Jones, 75, it's amazing that he's back at his old high school at all, let alone with a limousine, marching band and red carpet.
When Jones left the Virginia school in 1966, he "promised" himself he would "never go back there," he told CBS News. He was attending the school in a different era: Schools across the south were desegregating, and his school in Lawrenceville, Virginia, was one of them. Jones was one of 15 children taking their first, painful steps into the building.
"On the bus, students would bring KKK flyers," Jones recalled. "When I would come down the hall, they would close their nose and say 'Here comes a skunk.' I felt as if I had leprosy."
The other students — Yvonne Stewart, Vernal Cox, Sandra Goldman, Rosa Stith, Queen Marks, Joyce Walker, India Walker, Florence Stith, Elvertha Cox, Cecelia Mason, Carolyn Burwell, Beatrice Malone, Barbara Evans and Ashton Thurman — had similar experiences.
Even decades later, the memories haunted Jones. One day, to try to heal, Jones decided to put pen to paper and write letters to the very students who had tormented him.
In one letter, Jones said he left the school "very bitter" because of how he was "verbally abused on a daily basis." He wrote 90 such letters, pouring his pain and heart out whether his former classmates wanted to hear it or not. Most didn't, but one letter he mailed struck a different tone.
Paul Fleshood was one of the few students who never bullied Jones or said an unkind word, and when he received the letter, it "really touched" him, he told CBS News. Jones had written that there had been "many days" where he "wanted to strike up a conversation" with Fleshood and thought that they "could have been friends."
Fleshood said he had the sense that Jones was trying to open a door. "I thought 'Well, I'm going to go through that door,'" Fleshood said.
The two became close friends, and last week, Fleshood and other community leaders hosted a ceremony celebrating the "Brunswick 15," embracing the students who had once been treated as untouchables with open arms.
That's when Jones returned to the school where he said he had never had one good day as a student.
"It means a lot," Jones said. "It means that we have overcome a lot. And I appreciate that."
- In:
- Virginia
Steve Hartman has been a CBS News correspondent since 1998, having served as a part-time correspondent for the previous two years.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Bus carrying wedding guests rolls over in Australia's wine country, killing 10 and injuring dozens
- PHOTOS: The Record-Breaking Heat Wave That's Scorching The Pacific Northwest
- Parts Of The Amazon Rainforest Are Now Releasing More Carbon Than They Absorb
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Suspect charged in stabbing of 4 French children; victims no longer in life-threatening condition
- Tom Brady's Latest Outing With His and Gisele Bündchen's Kids Is a Work of Art
- Both sides suffer heavy casualties as Ukraine strikes back against Russia, UK intelligence says
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Last Day To Save 56% On the Nespresso Vertuo Machine To Enjoy Barista-Quality Espresso and Coffee at Home
Ranking
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Amid A Megadrought, Federal Water Shortage Limits Loom For The Colorado River
- Love Is Blind's Irina Apologizes for Her Immature Behavior on the Show
- Love Is Blind's Irina Apologizes for Her Immature Behavior on the Show
- Sam Taylor
- Meghan Markle Scores Legal Victory in Sister Samantha's Defamation Case
- Exxon Lobbyist Caught On Video Talking About Undermining Biden's Climate Push
- On trip to China, Blinken to raise cases of wrongfully detained Americans with Chinese
Recommendation
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
Mother of 4 children lost in Amazon for 40 days initially survived plane crash, oldest sibling says
Hayden Panettiere Reveals Where She Stands With Brian Hickerson
Australian Scott White gets 9 years in prison for punching gay American Scott Johnson off Sydney cliff in 1988
Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
See the first-of-its-kind seat that will make airplanes more accessible for travelers with wheelchairs
Eva Mendes Looks Back on Movie Where She Met Ryan Gosling Lifetimes Ago
Iran helping Russia build plant to manufacture drones for likely use in Ukraine, White House says