Thursday, April 5, 2018

Founder of Johnson High School Honored in 2015 School Yearbook

School is Featured in Anne Moody's Autobiography

By Roscoe Barnes III
Chairman, Anne Moody History Project
Copyright © 2018

#AnneMoody 


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Charles E. Johnson of Woodville, Miss., is doing his part to preserve and promote the history of the school system in Wilkinson County in southwest Mississippi. Johnson, who is now retired, served for many years as the Superintendent of Education in the county. For the last few years, he’s spent quality time assisting with the school district yearbook.

In the 2015 yearbook, Johnson featured a piece related to the life history of Anne Moody, author of Coming of Age in Mississippi. In a nice two-page spread, Johnson presented a Dedication Page to the Rev. Henry L. Johnson, the founder of Johnson High School, and a second page that featured the photos of the 1959 high school graduates. Johnson High School was a historically black school. 

Charles Johnson (no relation to Henry) described the school’s founder as a “minister, civic worker and humanitarian whose unselfish work spearheaded a drive to solicit funds which made it possible to erect the first high school building for black children in Wilkinson County in 1949.”

The Dedication Page included a color photo of Rev. Johnson. A copy of the photo is also located at the African American Museum in Woodville, which is run by the Woodville Civic Club Inc. The school, a six-room wooden structure, was located on Gaylord Street in Woodville. It was torn down in the 1960s.


Moody wrote about Johnson High School in Coming of Age. She began attending the school soon after moving to Woodville, where she lived with her father, Fred Moody Sr. “Meantime, I was going to Johnson High School every day,” she wrote in Chapter 17 of her book. She later wrote:

During that spring I hardly saw Emma or Daddy at all. Johnson High had become one of the most challenged teams in the state and I was one of its most valuable players. In addition, I organized Johnson High’s first gymnastic and tumbling team, ran track, did substitute teaching, and spent all day Sunday in church. Before I realized it, I was practicing for graduation.

Moody graduated in 1959, the year that Johnson High School officially closed, according to Coming of Age. The graduation ceremony was held at the Wilkinson County Training School. Surprisingly, however, Moody’s photo does not appear in the 1959 school photo of graduates.



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Would you like to know MORE about Anne Moody? Visit here to
see the timeline of important events in her life history!

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For more information: 
See the Anne Moody page here.
Questions about the Anne Moody History Project may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on Anne Moody history and the on-going work of this community service project, simply follow this blog or follow AMHP on Twitter (@AnneMoodyHP). #ComingOfAgeinMississippi

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