Public History and the Arts
Stories from a Rosenwald School in Mars Hill
The artwork of children once graced the walls of the Mars Hill Anderson Rosenwald School. This two-room school provided a close-knit learning community for Black students in grades 1-8 from 1930 -1965. Alumni speak of the passion for learning, reading, and the arts they gained, even with unequal resources like frayed, secondhand textbooks.
PAGE was honored in 2021 to offer the first educational programming for youth in the Mars Hill Anderson Rosenwald School (MHARS) since it closed in 1965. PAGE students’ creative work with hands helped them connect with historical content: old photos, recorded interviews with alumni and historians, documentary films, books and poetry about Rosenwald schools, even a special visit from Smithsonian oral historian Kelly Navies.
A quilting project, led by Teaching Artist Jenny Pickens, became a lens for helping girls honor the stories of the school’s alumni and former teachers.
This new humanities PageLab connecting history and the arts took place inside the historic two-room schoolhouse.
PAGE students and our teaching team gathered inside the schoolhouse each morning to quilt as a way of studying history. The beautiful windows that frame one entire side of the schoolhouse will display quilting squares that tell an important part of Appalachia’s story.