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Category: 5. Higher education; University of North Carolina
at Pembroke
JANS001. Janson, Donald. Indians
try to save old college building. New York Times June 10,
1972, page 22. 1169 words.
1 photograph
Publication type: Newspaper article
Electronic access: ProQuest Historical News New York Times
Useful overview of the background and issues involved
in the highly publicized Save Old Main movement. Pembroke
State University Chancellor English Jones had authorizedand North
Carolina Governor Robert W. Scott and the Council of State had approvedthe
destruction of the 49-year-old Old Main building, to make way for construction
of a $1.6 million auditorium. Some 8,600 Lumbees and other supporters
signed a petition urging preservation of the building, which symbolized,
for the Lumbees, progress and access to education after being unable
to attend school for over fifty years. Before it was padlocked for safety
reasons, Old Main had been used not only as a classroom building and
auditorium but also for Lumbee gospel sings, annual school festivals,
and funerals for illustrious Lumbee individuals. Dexter Brooks, Lumbee,
and then a mathematics teacher, stated, There is not a single
educated Indian around here who cannot trace the origins of his education
to Old Main.
The article cites a telephone conversation with Sam
Ragan, then serving as secretary of the North Carolina Department of
Cultural Resources, in which Ragan explained that the agencys
assessment was that Old Main had only intangible historical
significancetoo little for the state to recommend it for federal
status as a historic site.
The article also discusses issues such as Pembroke
State Universitys mostly white enrollment and observations by
Lewis R. Barton (see also The Lumbee Indians: an annotated bibliography,
item 212) and Randall Ackley (see also The Lumbee Indians: an annotated
bibliography, item 225) about the universitys de-Indianization.
Additional Subjects: Old Main
This annotation was written on: May
13, 2003; edited on May 26, 2003.
Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net
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