Like many black school principals, Ulysses Byas, who served the
Gainesville, Georgia, school system in the 1950s and 1960s, was
reverently addressed by community members as "Professor." He kept
copious notes and records throughout his career, documenting
efforts to improve the education of blacks. Through conversations
with Byas and access to his extensive archives on his
principalship, Vanessa Siddle Walker finds that black principals
were well positioned in the community to serve as conduits of
ideas, knowledge, and tools to support black resistance to
officially sanctioned regressive educational systems in the Jim
Crow South.
Walker explains that principals participated in local, regional,
and national associations, comprising a black educational network
through which power structures were formed and ideas were spread to
schools across the South. The professor enabled local school
empowerment and applied the collective wisdom of the network to
pursue common school projects such as pressuring school
superintendents for funding, structuring professional development
for teachers, and generating local action that was informed by
research in academic practice. The professor was uniquely
positioned to learn about and deploy resources made available
through these networks. Walker's record of the transfer of ideology
from black organizations into a local setting illuminates the
remembered activities of black schools throughout the South and
recalls for a new generation the role of the professor in uplifting
black communities.