- Highlander Research and Education Center
The Highlander Research and Education Center, formerly known as the Highlander Folk School, is a leadership training school and cultural center located in
New Market, Tennessee . Founded in 1932 by activistMyles Horton ,educator Don West, andMethodist ministerJames A. Dombrowski , it was originally located in the town of Monteagle, in Grundy County,Tennessee . It was featured in the 1985documentary film "You Got to Move ".Highlander has provided training and education for the labor movement in
Appalachia and throughout theSouthern United States . During the 1950s, it played a critical role in the American civil rights movement. It trained civil rights leaderRosa Parks prior to her historic role in theMontgomery Bus Boycott . The resulting backlash led to the school's closure by the state of Tennessee in 1961. It reorganized and moved to Knoxville, Tennessee, where it reopened, later becoming the Highlander Research and Education Center.History
Early years
When Highlander was founded in 1932, the United States was in the midst of the
Great Depression . Workers in all parts of the country were met with major resistance by employers when they tried to organize labor unions, especially in the South. Against that backdrop, Horton, West and Dombrowski created the Highlander School "to provide an educational center in the South for the training of rural and industrial leaders, and for the conservation and enrichment of the indigenous cultural values of the mountains." Horton was influenced by observing rural adult education schools inDenmark started in the 19th century by Danish Lutheran BishopNikolaj Frederik Severin Grundtvig . [Donald N. Roberson, Jr., 2002, [http://eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/1a/10/dc.pdf The Seeds of Social Change from Denmark] ]During the 1930s and 1940s, the school's main focus was labor education and the training of labor organizers.
Civil rights
In the 1950s, Highlander turned its energies to the rising issues of
civil rights anddesegregation . A key figure during this period wasJohn Beauchamp Thompson , a minister and educator who became one of the principal fund-raisers and speakers for the school. He worked alongsideRalph David Abernathy andMartin Luther King, Jr. . Highlander worked withEsau Jenkins ofJohns Island to develop a literacy program for blacks prevented from registering to vote by literacy requirements. The program was replicated throughout the South under the nameCitizenship Schools . Later the program was adopted by theSouthern Christian Leadership Conference . Notably, the civil rights anthem "We Shall Overcome " was adapted (from an old gospel song) byZilphia Horton , folksingerPete Seeger , andGuy Carawan and others at Highlander.Backlash
In reaction to the effective work done by the school, during the late 1950s Southern newspapers attacked Highlander for supposedly creating racial strife. In 1957, the Georgia Commission on Education published a pamphlet entitled, "Highlander Folk School: Communist Training School in Monteagle, Tennessee". Finally, in 1961, the state of Tennessee revoked Highlander's charter and confiscated its land and property. Later that year, the Highlander staff reincorporated as the Highlander Research and Education Center and moved to Knoxville, where it stayed until 1971. Then it relocated to its current location in
New Market, Tennessee .Appalachian issues
In the 1960s and 1970s, Highlander began to focus on worker health and safety in the coalfields of
Appalachia . Its leaders played a role in the emergence of the region'senvironmental justice movement. It helped start theSouthern Appalachian Leadership Training (SALT) program, and coordinated a survey of land ownership in Appalachia. In the 1980s and 1990s, Highlander broadened from that base into broader regional, national, and internationalenvironmentalism ; struggles against the negative effects ofglobalization ; grassroots leadership development in under-resourced communities; and beginning in the 1990s, an involvement inLGBT issues, both in the U.S. and internationally.ince 2000
Current focuses of Highlander include issues of democratic participation and
economic justice , with a particular focus onyouth immigrants to the U.S. from Latin America,African American s, and poor white people.Directors
The directors of Highlander have been:
*
Myles Horton , 1932-1973
*Mike Clark, 1973-1984
*Hubert E. Sapp , 1984-1993
*John Gaventa , 1993-1996
*Jim Sessions , 1996-1999
*Suzanne Pharr , 1999-2003
*Mónica Hernández andTami Newman , interim co-directors 2004-2005
*Pam McMichael , interim director, 2005; director 2006-Notes
References
*John M. Glen, "Highlander: No Ordinary School". University of Tennessee Press: 1996. ISBN 0-87049-928-9
* [http://foia.fbi.gov/foiaindex/hfschool.htm Federal Bureau of Investigation "Highlander Folk School" files obtained under the Freedom of Information Act]
*Frank Adams, with Myles Horton, "Unearthing Seeds of Fire: The Idea of Highlander". John F. Blair: 1975. ISBN 0-89587-019-3
*Jeff Biggers, "The United States of Appalachia: How Southern Mountaineers Brought Independence, Culture and Enlightenment to America". Emeryville, CA: Shoemaker and Hoard. ISBN ISBN-10: 1593761511 ISBN-13: 978-1593761516
*Peter B. Gemma, ed., "Shots Fired: Sam Francis on America's Culture War" (Vienna, Virginia: Fitzgerald Griffin Foundation Books, 2006), pp. 162-164
*Myles Horton, with Herbert and Judith Kohl, "The Long Haul". Teachers College Press: 1997. ISBN 0-8077-3700-3
*Myles Horton and Paulo Friere, "We Make the Road by Walking". Temple University Press: 1990. ISBN 0-87722-775-6
*History - 1930-1953: Beginnings & The Labor Years, http://www.hrec.org/a-history.asp
* [http://160.36.208.47/FMPro?-db=tnencyc&-format=tdetail.htm&-lay=web&entryid=H048&-find= TnEncyc: Highlander Folk School]
* [http://160.36.208.47/FMPro?-db=tnencyc&-format=tdetail.htm&-lay=web&entryid=H049&-find= TnEncy: Highlander Research and Education Center]
*Pam McMichael, "Dear Friend of Highlander", "Highlander Reports", April 2005, ( [http://www.highlandercenter.org/pdf-files/highlander-reports-05-april.pdf PDF] )
*Eliot Wigginton, ed., "Refuse to Stand Silently By: An Oral History of Grass Roots Social Activism in America, 1921-1964". Doubleday, 1991. ISBN 0-385-17572-8External links
* [http://www.highlandercenter.org Highlander Center official web site]
* [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/ead-idx?c=shs&id=uw-whs-mss0026501 The Highlander archive at the Wisconsin Historical Society - Over 350,000 documents and 1800 audio recordings from the Highlander Folk School]
* [http://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/highlander/ "Integrated in All Respects": Ed Friend's Highlander Folk School Film and the Politics of Segregation"] in the [http://dlg.galileo.usg.edu/ Digital Library of Georgia]
* [http://www.southernhistory.net/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=10263 Myles F. Horton, Tennessee's "Radical Hillbilly": The Highlander Folk School and Education for Social Change in America, the South, and the Volunteer State] By James B. Jones, Jr. "Southern History Net" website.
* [http://ernie1241.googlepages.com/HFS-1] = Martin Luther King Jr., and the "Communist Training School" Controversy (using first-time-released FBI files and documents)
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