Current:Home > StocksClose friendship leads to celebration of "Brunswick 15" who desegregated Virginia school -Ascend Finance Compass
Close friendship leads to celebration of "Brunswick 15" who desegregated Virginia school
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-10 15:51:52
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! (623)
Related
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Bear attacks 7-year-old boy in his suburban New York backyard
- 'We didn’t get the job done:' White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf's patience finally runs out
- Nvidia’s rising star gets even brighter with another stellar quarter propelled by sales of AI chips
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Louisiana fights wildfires, as extreme heat and dry weather plague the state
- Van poof! Dutch e-bike maker VanMoof goes bankrupt, leaving riders stranded
- California may pay unemployment to striking workers. But the fund to cover it is already insolvent
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Trial for suspect in Idaho student stabbings postponed after right to speedy trial waived
Ranking
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- First GOP debate kicks off in Milwaukee with attacks on Biden, Trump absent from the stage
- Titans cornerback Caleb Farley's father killed, another injured in explosion at NFL player's house
- Mother of Army private in North Korea tells AP that her son ‘has so many reasons to come home’
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- 'Serving Love': Coco Gauff partners with Barilla to give away free pasta, groceries. How to enter.
- Rumer Willis reveals daughter Louetta's name 'was a typo': 'Divine intervention'
- What Trump's GA surrender will look like, Harold makes landfall in Texas: 5 Things podcast
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
CBS News poll analysis: At the first Republican debate what policy goals do voters want to hear? Stopping abortions isn't a top one
Giants TE Tommy Sweeney 'stable, alert' after 'scary' medical event at practice
Gwyneth Paltrow’s 'Shallow Hal' body double struggled with disordered eating: 'I hated my body'
Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
Bans on diverse board books? Young kids need to see their families represented, experts say
3 inches of rain leads to flooding, evacuations for a small community near the Grand Canyon
Nevada man accused of 2018 fatal shooting at rural church incompetent to stand trial