Written by: Caitlin.Childs@unt.edu
Via The North Texan. (Erin Cristales)
When her name was called, Micah Crittenden ('18) walked quickly to the podium, smoothing
her navy blazer and red skirt before opening the three-ring binder she had meticulously
prepared. It was the first time the UNT history graduate student had spoken in front
of the Pilot Point City Council, and this was not, as she well knew, a low-stakes
meeting.
For nearly five years, the council and the Harris family had been at an impasse over
a dilapidated house at 522 E. Burks St. -- purchased in the late 1940s by now-deceased
patriarch Melvin Harris -- that the city had ruled substandard in 2014. Pilot Point
officials worried the vacant structure was not only an eyesore but a potential danger
for neighborhood kids or vagrants. The Harris family needed more time, and more money,
to complete the required repairs.
That night, the council was ready to vote on the house's condemnation. Community members,
some of whom were there to rebut concerns over the home, had submitted requests to
speak. Crittenden, at the last minute, was one of them. Though not a Pilot Point resident,
in the weeks preceding the meeting, she had come to know more about the history of
this small town than possibly anyone else in the room.
Case in point, the binder. Inside were property and census and draft records that
sketched a brief history of Harris and, crucially, evidence that his home had previously
been a one-room schoolhouse for African American students -- locally, the last of
its kind -- in a lost community known as Oakdale.
"If you'll give me a moment, I'd like to tell you the story I've uncovered."
Crittenden flipped a few pages, cleared her throat. The tale begins, she told them,
after Emancipation, when a sharecropper named Louis Whitlow Sr. from Chambers County,
Alabama, took 65 freed men, women and children and founded a community on the Cooke
County-Denton County line. In 1905, the community built, as part of its St. James
Baptist Church, a one-room structure that housed a school.
"That structure," she said, "is located at 522 E. Burks St."
That seemed to get the council's attention, but after more than an hour of terse arguing
between city officials and the Harris family, they were still on the fence. Whether
out of genuine interest or simple exhaustion, the members struck a deal: Find more
evidence that the house is what you say it is, they told Crittenden, along with some
possible sources for funding, and we'll leave the home standing.
And that's how, in the two months and more than 200 hours of research that followed,
she came to play a starring role in rescuing one of the last remaining relics of a
disappeared community.
Tracing how Crittenden arrived at that juncture is not unlike her journey through
the documents and photos and stories that coalesced to reveal, in wide brush strokes,
the portrait of a vanished neighborhood. It's a circuitous path, in which one stepping
stone leads to another and back again.
And it all begins with two UNT professors who trusted their students enough to collect,
explore and connect with local history.
It was the first day of class, but Todd Moye and Andrew Torget had far more planned
for their students than the traditional rundown of required reading, test dates and
attendance policies. The two, buoyed by anticipation and high expectations, jumped
right into the heart of their public history research seminar, sharing the genesis
of what would become a semester-long -- and for a few of the students, longer -- quest
to uncover the story of the St. John's community.
"Not only do we not know what the end result will look like," Moye told the assemblage
of undergraduate and graduate students, their faces a cocktail of apprehension, curiosity
and excitement. "But we don't know if it's even possible to come up with one."
He and Torget never intended to turn the class into a mystery, but at the end of the
day, they figured, isn't most research detective work? Might as well confront the
intimidation factor head on and turn their students into the kind of dogged historical
investigators who would leave no stone unturned -- which, in this course, would often
literally be the case.
In recent years, the Denton County Office of History and Culture had assumed responsibility
for the upkeep of St. John's Cemetery, the overgrown burial grounds for African Americans
who had called the freedmen's community near Pilot Point home, and conducted research
into the site with limited resources. Intrigued by what little they knew about St.
John's, Moye and Torget offered to develop a class that would center on discovering
more about the families buried there. But considering former residents of St. John's
had long ago scattered to the winds, finding any trace of detailed records or living
descendants would be tough, if not downright impossible.
"We took a leap of faith that we could figure out who the people were and what their
lives were like along the way," Moye says. "'Let's try to figure this out together'
is a really exciting thing to be able to say to students."
Prior to the start of the spring 2018 semester, Moye and Torget spent a year laying
the groundwork for the course, with their previous experience guiding the preparation.
In 2016, they led a seminar in which students investigated the 1956 integration of
Mansfield High School, a project that resulted in the creation of an online museum,
as well as deep connections among the students and the city's African American community.
The findings were incorporated into Mansfield's 50th anniversary celebration of the
school's integration, and local community colleges use the research to teach about
civil rights.
For the St. John's project, Moye and Torget split the class into six teams and tasked
them with delving into everything from the history of St. John's Baptist Church and
St. John's Cemetery to the community's social, geographic and economic connections.
The students then uploaded their findings to an Omeka database created and hosted
by the UNT Libraries.
"It becomes an intoxicating thing," says Torget, who last year set the Guinness World
Record for longest history lesson following a non-stop 26-hour lecture on Texas history.
"It's up to the students to make the discoveries and the decisions. They take ownership
and responsibility for the information in a way they aren't typically asked to."
What also was intriguing, and deeply unsettling, was the stark reality of disappeared
communities in the North Texas region. During the first few weeks of class, the professors
had their students read a thesis penned by former UNT history student Chelsea Stallings
('09, '15 M.A.). Her work detailed the dissolution of Quakertown, a robust local freedmen's
community that in 1921 was displaced by Denton officials under the guise of "beautifying
the city with a public park."
That year, a majority of the city's white citizens voted to remove Quakertown residents
from their home, a middle-class neighborhood that included medical facilities, stores,
churches and a school, and built Civic Center Park -- renamed "Quakertown Park" in
2007 -- in its stead. After many of their homes and businesses were seized, or purchased
for pennies on the dollar, Quakertown families were relocated to a barren cow pasture.
"It blew my mind that there was so much we don't talk about and hasn't been known
because we traditionally have a white-dominated history," says Stallings, who notes
that when she was a history student, Moye "pushed me in ways I didn't even realize
at the time." She's currently pursuing a Ph.D. in history at TCU and is one of the
leaders of the Denton County Community Remembrance Project, an extension of Alabama's National Memorial for Peace and Justice, that seeks to
memorialize lynching victims. "We've had African American communities who have done
so many amazing things in the area, and we, as white people, have historically torn
them down."
Stallings' research lit a fire in Crittenden and her classmates to reconstruct the
St. John's narrative, which was in many ways different from that of Quakertown. Settled
during Reconstruction by black Alabamians, St. John's began to dwindle in the 1920s
when residents left for better economic prospects and, as would become apparent to
the students later, to flee racial violence. But the history of the community and
its people had likewise been allowed to fade into obscurity. The frequently careless
storage of documents related to African American citizens, coupled with the fact that
few residents kept diaries or wrote letters, meant many freedmen's communities had
practically vanished from the historical record, and the artifacts that did survive
were often housed in dusty, forgotten boxes, uncataloged and uncared for.
Crittenden was assigned to the "People of St. John's" team, a group that included
undergrads Emily Bowles ('18) and Jessica Floyd ('18) and grad student Hannah Stewart
('17, '19 M.A.). The team scoured historical databases like the Portal to Texas History,
and reached out to the Denton County Office of History and Culture, who led them to
John White. He visited the class to recount his memories of his grandmother, who moved
from Camp Hill, Alabama, to St. John's in 1883 when she was 5 years old, and brought
photos of his ancestors who are buried in the cemetery. White grew up on the outskirts
of Pilot Point, raised in the shadow of St. John's forgotten history, and as he spoke
to Moye and Torget's students, he relayed the stories his grandmother had passed on
to him about the community, as well as his desire to see some light finally shed on
its legacy.
"I want other people to know the history of St. John's -- I don't want it to end with
me," says White, who from 2016 to 2018 served on the Pilot Point City Council. "I'm
not going to be here very long at my age, and I have kids and grandkids and relatives
who don't know their history. If you don't know where you came from, there's a chance
you don't know where you're going. So I want this history to be available to everyone."
The team's task in uncovering that history sometimes required getting down and dirty
-- they often found themselves on their hands and knees, flipping over headstones
hidden under overgrown foliage. Among a row of infant plots, they uncovered a grave
marked "Littel (Little) Safe Smith," with the name and dates meticulously hand-carved
into the stone. In the weeks before that discovery, they had cobbled together bios
of the parents, Henry and Lissie, and knew the couple had lost a child. What they
didn't know was how galvanizing unearthing the tombstone would be.
"I was just so heartbroken, I started bawling right there by the grave," says Bowles,
a single mother who continued to visit the cemetery even after her research was concluded.
"That's when I knew how much I genuinely cared about this community."
The group found more information about the people of St. John's than they ever thought
possible. They contributed 49 individual biographies to the Omeka database, which
now contains more than 650 artifacts related to St. John's, including photos, official
records, oral histories and news clippings.
When White visited earlier in the semester, he promised he would return on the final
day of class to see the students' work. He kept his word, reappearing alongside Peggy
Riddle, director of the Denton County Office of History and Culture, and Willie Hudspeth
('90, '93 M.Ed.), president of the Denton County NAACP and a longtime local civil
rights advocate who was one of the first to press for the preservation of St. John's
Cemetery. He has painstakingly pulled weeds and removed debris by hand to ensure that
the grave markers in the cemetery -- many of which are simple rocks -- remain undisturbed.
As the students' presentation unfolded, other long-ago images flickered through Hudspeth's
mind. He traveled back to 1963, to when he was a 15-year-old growing up in segregated
north Fort Worth and saw a classmate return to school battered and bruised in the
wake of a brutal, racially motivated attack. It wasn't the first, or final, time he
would bear witness to that level of violence.
"When they started talking about St. John's and Pilot Point and what they had found
out, it took me back to when I first started to understand what was happening to me
and my community as black people. There's nowhere to go to get help, you're just out
there by yourself. And I was angry -- I was so angry back then," Hudspeth says. "But
boy, those students worked hard. What they came up with lets us understand what happened
and helps us move forward."
That's what the students most wanted -- not a grade or a portfolio piece, but to see
that, at the end of the day, their research mattered.
"It's true that you always hope your students will empathize with the people they're
researching," Moye says, "but you can't always be sure they will. These students absolutely
felt like they had to do right by St. John's."
As the spring semester drew to a close, Crittenden, Bowles, Floyd and Stewart weren't
ready to call it quits. They had spent months thinking about St. John's -- combing
through birth and death certificates, marriage and war discharge records -- but they
still weren't certain why the community so quickly disbanded in the early 20th century.
"Sometimes you can fill in those gaps, and sometimes the records aren't there," says
Torget, who became the students' advisor for an independent study project on St. John's,
along with Moye. "But that compulsion to finish the story, answer the question, resurrect
a community -- that becomes bigger than the assignment itself."
So when he stumbled across a Denton Record-Chronicle article about a lynching that
took place in December 1922, Torget knew it was something the team needed to see.
A news bulletin from the time detailed that two men, detained at the Pilot Point jail
for horse theft, were reported missing the next day. An unsigned note was found on
the door of the local newspaper office. "Both negroes got what they had coming," it
said. "Let this be a warning to all negro loafers. Negroes get a job or leave town."
The bulletin concluded just as chillingly, noting that two men who had similarly disappeared
from lockup several months before were never heard from again. The jail, the reporter
disclosed in the final line, is unguarded at night.
"It made me feel ignorant, realizing that this area had a much darker history than
I ever thought," Floyd says. "I knew the South had been adamant in keeping Jim Crow
laws, I knew about the issues with Mansfield's integration. But it didn't really hit
home until I saw the evidence that Denton County played a massive part in this kind
of racial violence, well into the 20th century."
The team spent months scrutinizing local news reports from the early 1900s, many of
which made mention of vanished African American residents and Ku Klux Klan activity.
There were articles that even praised those complicit in such activities, some of
whom were Denton County officials, as "upstanding citizens."
This unchecked impunity, the students realized, is why so many St. John's residents
had abandoned the community they called home. And they had the facts to prove it.
Stewart created a spreadsheet that contained every mention of the KKK in local newspapers
and records from 1917 to 1928. Crittenden compiled one that detailed reports of every
African American arrested locally from 1909 to 1925. The data was conclusive: Klan
activity surged around the same time crimes allegedly committed by black residents
occurred. And with jails conveniently left unguarded, Jim Crow justice reigned.
"It was hard to see that this kind of thing is what they were facing every day," Stewart
says. "You've gotten to know these people, you're rooting for them on census records
as you're tracking their lives. They're players in history, but it's so personal at
this point. It was heartbreaking to see that they came here hoping for a better life.
For many, that did happen. But for others, it was taken away from them."
It seemed like the sun had been allowed to set on Denton County's unseemly past. But
then, the truth was at long last thrust into the spotlight: Media outlets began to
pick up the story of the students and their research. Articles were penned in the
Denton Record-Chronicle and The Dallas Morning News, segments were filmed for NBC
5. Torget recounts running into several Dentonites who mentioned the students' work
and marveled at what they had uncovered.
The four student researchers then presented their findings of what life was like for
the residents of St. John's to the Denton County Commissioners Court, who drew upon
their account when applying for a funding application for an Untold Story marker from
the Texas Historical Commission. Riddle said the Office of History and Culture soon
hopes to employ infrared technology to better locate gravesites at St. John's Cemetery
and plans to set up family visitation days where residents can see the site. The cemetery
is surrounded on all sides by private property, meaning permission is required to
visit.
The students and Hudspeth say such plans are a step in the right direction, but there's
still plenty of road to travel. It's vital, they say, that the people who lived and
died and fled and vanished from St. John's can finally, and properly, be remembered.
"This is a history people don't want to be reminded of," Hudspeth says. "It brings
to mind what happened to so many people and what's happening to people now. Let's
bring up this history and examine it, so we can teach our children and everyone else
to never let this happen again."
Before the conclusion of the fall 2018 semester, the group placed a bouquet of metal
flowers near the entrance to the cemetery. It was a tribute, and in some ways, a goodbye.
They hadn't found the answers to all their questions, an impossible task in just one
year. Still, they understood it was time to move on.
Stewart earned her master's in education in spring 2019, and began work as a middle
school history teacher. Floyd graduated in fall 2018 and began to pursue a teaching
certification. Bowles had applied and was accepted to UNT's history master's program.
Crittenden, too, had begun embarking on her master's that fall, but she couldn't shake
the startling nature of her findings, and those of Stallings previously. If there
was more out there to discover, and she knew there must be, maybe she was just the
person for the job.
She thought of how Torget signed his emails when she informed him of a new discovery:
"Onward."
So disappearances became the subject of her thesis -- specifically, those that occurred
in Denton County during the Jim Crow era following interactions with the justice system.
When she told Moye, he asked, "Are you sure you don't just want to write a really
pretty biography?"
They both knew the answer to that question.
Crittenden started compiling records from Ancestry.com and the UNT Libraries' vast
collection of online databases. The hours upon hours of information gathering had
a weirdly calming effect on her brain -- "like playing Sudoku," she says. But as she
fell further down the rabbit hole of Denton County history, there was more urgency
to claw her way to the truth.
One key was to figure out what had happened to the two men mentioned at the end of
the 1922 news bulletin, who had disappeared from the Pilot Point jail several months
prior to the disappearance of the alleged horse thieves who were the subject of the
article. Shortly before the men vanished in October 1921, they were taken to a property
just north of town and flogged. The property was owned by a man named Joe Burks, whose
father, William D. Burks Sr., was formerly a mayor of Pilot Point. As Crittenden tried
to locate more information about Joe, she kept stumbling over present-day stories
of a house on Burks Street that the Pilot Point City Council was considering condemning.
The surnames of those speaking to save the home -- Harris, Holloway -- seemed oddly
familiar. And then it hit her: The names were connected to St. John's.
Though it was only a few weeks before the rough draft of her first thesis chapter
was due, Crittenden reached out to the Office of History and Culture to help connect
her with the Harris family. Family members told her they believed the home had once
been a one-room schoolhouse in Oakdale, known as the Lincoln Academy, that had been
transplanted to Burks Street sometime in the 1940s after Melvin Harris purchased it.
An oral history Crittenden and her teammates gathered during the St. John's project
lent credence to the claim that the Oakdale structure had existed. One descendant,
Pearlie Mae Simpson, told the story of her mother's baptism in Oakdale, in a creek
that ran behind the St. James Baptist Church and an adjacent schoolhouse.
Crittenden looked for all the records she could in the two weeks leading up to the
city council meeting, securing copies of any evidence she found in her binder. As
a community, Oakdale was long gone -- the area existed where Lake Ray Roberts now
resides. But the Harris family had placed their hopes in her, and she was determined
to not let them down.
The meeting wasn't exactly a resounding success -- the council's concession to leave
the home standing, at least for a while longer, didn't read as a slam dunk. But for
the Harris family, who just a few weeks ago were almost certain the Burks Street house
would face demolition, Crittenden had helped secure a much-needed victory.
"It feels like everything in our community is being dissolved," Melvin's granddaughter
Cecelia Harris told Crittenden as the meeting concluded. During the proceedings, Cecelia
grew increasingly upset as councilmembers again and again cited the potential dangers
the home posed to trespassers. Why, she asked, is it more important to protect those
violating the property than it is to protect the property itself?
Still, Cecelia exited the room with some small measure of relief. "Before, we didn't
have anybody to take on this issue with us. Now, with us joining together, maybe it
will all work out." Before she departed city hall, guided into the night by a glimmer
of hope, Crittenden handed her the binder. "I want you to have this," she said. As
Cecelia softly wept, the two embraced.
"I'll see you soon," Crittenden promised.
"Soon" was the operative word. The council had given her roughly 60 days to find definitive
proof that the house was in fact the Oakdale school, and to find potential sources
to fund renovations. With three kids at home, a job as a teaching assistant, and her
own thesis to continue writing, it wasn't going to be easy.
But preserving a last-of-its-kind piece of local history was, she knew, worth the
effort.
So she did exactly what she had been taught to do -- scoured databases, visited county
records offices, talked to people who were from the community or knew people who were.
When clerks would tell her no such records existed, she'd insist on looking anyway.
She discovered papers containing information about Lincoln Academy students that had
been stapled together and stored in Cooke County, in an old card catalog labeled "colored
school records."
After more than 200 hours of research, she had pieced together a portrait of the academy
and its attendees. With school and census records, she created social maps to show
how communities like Oakdale, St. John's and others were inextricably linked. She
found land records proving that when Oakdale consolidated with Pilot Point in the
1940s, the structure that housed the school was moved five miles south to its current
location on Burks Street. And she identified grants that could potentially offset
the cost of repairs.
On June 24, two months after her first presentation, Crittenden again appeared in
front of the Pilot Point City Council. She wasn't quite so apprehensive this time,
in part because she sensed the tenor of the room had shifted. After giving a 30-minute
presentation on what she had discovered, she fielded questions that led to a freeform
discussion with the council, community members and Rosalene Sledge, the current owner
of the home. When Crittenden explained that the grants she had found would likely
take a long time to complete and were uncertain to fully cover the cost of renovations,
Riddle pledged the Office of History and Culture's monetary support, offering to relocate
the house to the Denton County Historical Park and pay for its upkeep. Community members
threw out the names of contractors who could potentially help with repairs, and other
residents proposed starting a GoFundMe page.
"There was an interplay between people that made me feel like the home would be safe,"
Crittenden says.
The indisputable happy ending would be for the Harris family to keep the building
that Melvin rescued and transformed into a home. But still, Crittenden was right --
even if they can't raise the money for the required repairs, one way or another, the
structure will be saved from demolition.
More than 100 years after it first opened its doors to educate Oakdale's African American
community, Lincoln Academy had itself become a lesson in Denton County history.
For now, Crittenden's research into the Burks Street residence is done. In June, she
applied for funding for an Untold Story historical marker to honor the Oakdale community.
If granted, she will ask that the eventual marker -- with the blessing of the Harris
family -- be placed in front of the home.
She's also lending her expertise to the Denton County Community Remembrance Project.
Recently, she proposed five possible locations in which to collect a soil sample meant
to represent the bodies and burial of lynching victims. The Pilot Point jail and St.
John's Cemetery were two of the sites on her list.
And finally, she's compiling nearly two years of research into her thesis, which includes
digital components like social graphs built on Kumu, and chapters dedicated to the
victims of violence in Denton County.
It's not a definitive history, she knows, but it's a start. And when you sense that
something isn't right -- that the past has been forgotten or overlooked or marginalized
-- there's no time like the present to do something about it.
"You just have to trust that you can do it," Crittenden says. It's after dark, and
she's sitting on an old wooden picnic bench outside of Pilot Point City Hall, taking
a moment to gather her things before heading home to her husband and kids. "Whatever
amount of privilege I've been handed, I'm going to use it to hold the door open. That's
the best way I can be a human."
She stops for a moment and gazes at the building where, just minutes before, history
had triumphed.
"It's the only way I know how."
To learn more about the St. John's Community Project, visit the digital museum built by UNT students.