Change Our School Name back to Alfred Lawless High School in New Orleans, Louisiana

The Issue

The Alfred Lawless High School Alumni Association and Lower Ninth Ward Community have always been in support of our high school being rebuilt in the Lower Ninth Ward and on its original footprint in the community. Many of our former students and the community itself lobbied before the City of New Orleans and the then US Senator Mary Landrieu, among other local officials for this request to be fulfilled after our building was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. When the hope of our school being rebuilt became a reality in 2011, we were overjoyed and spread the news to all of our fellow alumni locally and nationally. However on August 18, 2015,  without any adequate notice to us or the surrounding community for tangible input, a vote by the Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB) was made by the request of Friends of King and their attorney Tracie Washington to change the name of our school to Dr. Martin Luther King Charter High School. The OPSB board asked Ms. Washington if the Alfred Lawless Alumni and the community supported this name change. On the record, she told them yes. The Alfred Lawless High School Alumni were not even aware that a vote was taking place. The leaders of the alumni association have never communicated with Friends of King or Ms. Washington concerning this. We and our community never supported this change. Friends of King, are the administrators of a school in Dr. King’s name in the Lower Ninth Ward already, along with Joseph Craig Elementary in the Treme area. We have no issue with the administration of a high school by Friends of King. We do take issue with them removing the name and continual legacy of Alfred Lawless from its landmark at our alma mater, from the facility, and diplomas of future graduates. As stated, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. already has a school in his name in our city, along with schools throughout the nation, highways, streets, and more are named after him. He even has a monument in his honor in Washington, D.C. The Alfred Lawless Alumni and Lower Ninth Ward community proudly support all of this. But Rev. Alfred Lawless had this one school. He deserves his part in our history. He deserves this school. We deserve this school. We deserve our memories for future generations. Rev. Alfred Lawless was a native of Thibodaux who later became principal of Fisk Colored School in New Orleans, which was the first public school in New Orleans to provide modern instructional equipment and adult education classes to African Americans. As a leader, he raised funds for an elementary school named for Valena C. Jones to be built in our city where no school was located for African American kids before. Rev. Lawless also became the Superintendent of Negro Congregational Churches in the South in 1917. Lawless Memorial Chapel on Dillard University's campus was also named in Rev. Lawless', and his son Theodore Lawless honor. He was our own local civil rights hero. Why remove this civil rights giant’s memorial in our history from us? Since opening its doors on January 27, 1964, Alfred Lawless Junior and Senior High School graduated and matriculated students by the likes of NBA players, Eldridge Recasner (now on the board of NBA Retired Players) and Robert Pack (formerly a player and currently the assistant coach for the New Orleans Pelicans); the first African American president of the Southern Baptist Association and Senior Pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, Pastor Fred Luter and his wife Mrs. Elizabeth Luter; WBOK/WGSO Broadcaster and former Sports Anchor and Reporter at WDSU of 22 years, Ro Brown; Kermit Ruffin, a world renowned New Orleans Jazz musician, and Oliver Thomas, a former City Councilman of New Orleans and actor on HBO's show Treme, with a host of other success stories. My mother recalled being one of the first classes at Alfred Lawless Junior High School during segregation. Prior to the school being built, they were bused to a black school uptown off of Third Street and Rocheblave named Darham. During that time, black kids went to black named schools and white kids went to white named schools, she recalled. She said, "Alfred Lawless was our school. We voted on the school colors of maroon, gold, and blue. We also gave you the mascot, we named the Pythian which comes from the Vikings." I want to continue her legacy. We all want to continue that legacy. And so to this end, we humbly ask that the Orleans Parish School Board vote to rescind the name change of Alfred P. Lawless High School in the Lower Ninth Ward and place it back on its physical landmark and charter, so that its new graduates will also receive diplomas bearing that name; to also recognize that the alum and vast majority of the community in the Lower Ninth Ward were not in support of this change on August 18, 2015; that any rule blocking this request also be taken up in a vote by the OPSB in favor of the Alfred Lawless High School Alumni, Lower Ninth Ward community, and constituents. Or, OPSB should allow a name change request be added to the next upcoming OPSB meeting agenda with ample time and notification to the alumni leaders and community to come out in support for this change. We also humbly solicit the support of all former graduates of the high schools of the City of New Orleans who understand the significance of continuing the high school legacy in our great city; our pastoral leaders and congregations, fellow citizens of the City of New Orleans; the Mayor of the City of New Orleans, the City Council of New Orleans; our elected local and national Louisiana Legislators; the La. Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE), the Louisiana Department of Education, and all those that understand and support our request.  Your name and or signature on this petition will help facilitate this change. Thank you.  

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Alfred Lawless High School Alumni AssociationPetition Starter
This petition had 1,055 supporters

The Issue

The Alfred Lawless High School Alumni Association and Lower Ninth Ward Community have always been in support of our high school being rebuilt in the Lower Ninth Ward and on its original footprint in the community. Many of our former students and the community itself lobbied before the City of New Orleans and the then US Senator Mary Landrieu, among other local officials for this request to be fulfilled after our building was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. When the hope of our school being rebuilt became a reality in 2011, we were overjoyed and spread the news to all of our fellow alumni locally and nationally. However on August 18, 2015,  without any adequate notice to us or the surrounding community for tangible input, a vote by the Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB) was made by the request of Friends of King and their attorney Tracie Washington to change the name of our school to Dr. Martin Luther King Charter High School. The OPSB board asked Ms. Washington if the Alfred Lawless Alumni and the community supported this name change. On the record, she told them yes. The Alfred Lawless High School Alumni were not even aware that a vote was taking place. The leaders of the alumni association have never communicated with Friends of King or Ms. Washington concerning this. We and our community never supported this change. Friends of King, are the administrators of a school in Dr. King’s name in the Lower Ninth Ward already, along with Joseph Craig Elementary in the Treme area. We have no issue with the administration of a high school by Friends of King. We do take issue with them removing the name and continual legacy of Alfred Lawless from its landmark at our alma mater, from the facility, and diplomas of future graduates. As stated, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. already has a school in his name in our city, along with schools throughout the nation, highways, streets, and more are named after him. He even has a monument in his honor in Washington, D.C. The Alfred Lawless Alumni and Lower Ninth Ward community proudly support all of this. But Rev. Alfred Lawless had this one school. He deserves his part in our history. He deserves this school. We deserve this school. We deserve our memories for future generations. Rev. Alfred Lawless was a native of Thibodaux who later became principal of Fisk Colored School in New Orleans, which was the first public school in New Orleans to provide modern instructional equipment and adult education classes to African Americans. As a leader, he raised funds for an elementary school named for Valena C. Jones to be built in our city where no school was located for African American kids before. Rev. Lawless also became the Superintendent of Negro Congregational Churches in the South in 1917. Lawless Memorial Chapel on Dillard University's campus was also named in Rev. Lawless', and his son Theodore Lawless honor. He was our own local civil rights hero. Why remove this civil rights giant’s memorial in our history from us? Since opening its doors on January 27, 1964, Alfred Lawless Junior and Senior High School graduated and matriculated students by the likes of NBA players, Eldridge Recasner (now on the board of NBA Retired Players) and Robert Pack (formerly a player and currently the assistant coach for the New Orleans Pelicans); the first African American president of the Southern Baptist Association and Senior Pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church, Pastor Fred Luter and his wife Mrs. Elizabeth Luter; WBOK/WGSO Broadcaster and former Sports Anchor and Reporter at WDSU of 22 years, Ro Brown; Kermit Ruffin, a world renowned New Orleans Jazz musician, and Oliver Thomas, a former City Councilman of New Orleans and actor on HBO's show Treme, with a host of other success stories. My mother recalled being one of the first classes at Alfred Lawless Junior High School during segregation. Prior to the school being built, they were bused to a black school uptown off of Third Street and Rocheblave named Darham. During that time, black kids went to black named schools and white kids went to white named schools, she recalled. She said, "Alfred Lawless was our school. We voted on the school colors of maroon, gold, and blue. We also gave you the mascot, we named the Pythian which comes from the Vikings." I want to continue her legacy. We all want to continue that legacy. And so to this end, we humbly ask that the Orleans Parish School Board vote to rescind the name change of Alfred P. Lawless High School in the Lower Ninth Ward and place it back on its physical landmark and charter, so that its new graduates will also receive diplomas bearing that name; to also recognize that the alum and vast majority of the community in the Lower Ninth Ward were not in support of this change on August 18, 2015; that any rule blocking this request also be taken up in a vote by the OPSB in favor of the Alfred Lawless High School Alumni, Lower Ninth Ward community, and constituents. Or, OPSB should allow a name change request be added to the next upcoming OPSB meeting agenda with ample time and notification to the alumni leaders and community to come out in support for this change. We also humbly solicit the support of all former graduates of the high schools of the City of New Orleans who understand the significance of continuing the high school legacy in our great city; our pastoral leaders and congregations, fellow citizens of the City of New Orleans; the Mayor of the City of New Orleans, the City Council of New Orleans; our elected local and national Louisiana Legislators; the La. Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE), the Louisiana Department of Education, and all those that understand and support our request.  Your name and or signature on this petition will help facilitate this change. Thank you.  

avatar of the starter
Alfred Lawless High School Alumni AssociationPetition Starter

The Decision Makers

Dr. Henderson Lewis
Dr. Henderson Lewis
Superintendent of the OPSB
Nolan Marshall
Nolan Marshall
OPSB Representative of District 7
John Brown
John Brown
OPSB Representative of District 1
Cynthia Cade
Cynthia Cade
OPSB Representative of District 2
Sarah Usdin
Sarah Usdin
OPSB Representative of District 3

Petition Updates