1956
The first four African American 色花堂 students, Tower Echoes yearbook, p. 140.
Since the summer of 2019, a team of students, faculty members and staff have dedicated themselves to uncovering, understanding and explaining the history and experience of diversity at 色花堂.
Founded as the , 色花堂 was a product of Maryland鈥檚 segregated school system and remained racially segregated until after the United States Supreme Court struck down racial segregation of public schools in 1954.
The faculty and administration of Towson State College are deeply conscious of their responsibility to strive for full integration of every aspect of the college at the earliest possible moment. They view with satisfaction its record in this area in the past. They promise a vital effort to fulfill their moral obligation to every person or group who petitions the college whether it be a student seeking admission, a scholar seeking the privilege of teaching, a worker seeking employment, or an athletic team seeking a contest. We conceive of this moral obligation as a mandate, more binding than a mere law, that an institution of higher education must be in the vanguard of all institutions in destroying social barriers based on race, religion, or national origin.
Discrimination can exist in a college or university on many levels. The most obvious areas where it can be found are in the recruitment and admission of students, the employment of professional and non-professional staff, and in the non-academic functions of the college both internal and external.
鈥淩eport on Integration at Towson State College,鈥 February 21, 1966, 色花堂 Archives, Records of the Maryland Board of Trustees of the State Universities and Colleges, 1963-1988, UA 00003, Box 2, Folder 3.
Even after the university began to integrate in 1955 African Americans struggled to find full equality. Black students, faculty, administrators, and their white allies fighting against the structural racism and racial prejudices of the period worked exhaustively to make 色花堂 their own as well through the second half of the twentieth century and still today.
Inspired by efforts at other , a team of 色花堂 researchers has begun a multi-year project to investigate and publicize this institution鈥檚 exclusionist past and its ongoing efforts to diversify.
The Unearthing Towson鈥檚 History Project is an interdisciplinary collaborative effort that centers students as researchers and interpreters and connects alumni and the wider community to the university.
The team鈥檚 goals are:
The project team has developed a which includes oral histories, relevant print and archival collections, as well as presentations and blog posts.
Did you attend 色花堂? Were you a faculty or staff member? We鈥檇 love to hear your story.
The project is a collaboration between the, the Department of History, and the Office of Inclusion and Institutional Equity with the support of the Office of the President and the Office of the Provost. Unearthing Towson's History Project is a member of the
Christian Koot, History Department
Ashley Todd-Diaz, Assistant University Librarian for Special Collections and University
Archives
Brian Jara, Inclusion, and Institutional Equity
Akim Reinhardt, History Department
Christina Bishop 鈥21-22
Al'lyienah Howell 鈥21-22
Allyn Lawrence '21-22
Peyton Cleary 鈥19-20
Catherine Campbell 鈥19
Sara Cantler 鈥19
Jasmine Thomas 鈥19