Douglass
High School, Oklahoma City
The
first African American school in OKC was founded in 1891, and would later
become Douglass High (named for the famous ex-slave author and abolitionist).
It has had a somewhat troubled and nomadic existence. After the first location
of the school suspiciously burned down, and the second location was grossly
inadequate and in an unsafe, industrial neighborhood, the 3rd
location of Douglass High (the only extant Douglass High building, other than
the 5th MAPS-built location) was not an easy move. Due to legal
battles regarding city, county, and even Federal ownership of properties, it
took three years to move Douglass High students into a new building. In 1934, the old “Lowell
School”, a previously all-white school
originally built in 1910 ,was expanded and became the 3rd location
of Douglass High School. With a swimming pool,
auditorium, stage, and proximity to students’ neighborhood, this was a great
step forward for the school’s student body.
Douglass High
School was home to pillars of the Oklahoma City
African American community. Examples
include Zelia Breaux, the first woman ever appointed President of the Oklahoma
Association of Negro Teachers, and daughter of the first President of Langston
University, Inman Page; and Ralph Ellison, author of the national bestseller
“Invisible Man” and one-time Vice President of ONG.
As
the only African American school in OKC, Douglass High School
quickly became overcrowded. A new high school was constructed in 1954, and Douglass High School
became the Page-Woodson 5th Grade Center.
Page-Woodson was then closed permanently in 1994 when 5th Grade
Centers across the city were converted to elementary schools through a federal
grant. The former Douglass High School
was the only school not converted, but simply closed, and has been vacant since
1994.
For
a short period of time around 2004, the non-profit organization Oklahoma City
Northeast Inc. had plans to renovate the building to be utilized for a
community cultural or development center. Unfortunately, these plans fell
through, and again the building sits abandoned, dangerously close to being
lost, either to its own deterioration or to make way for new development.