'' by
Pompeo Batoni, 1764.
Prince Edward, Duke of York and Albany, for whom the county was named
Formation and county seats Prince Edward County was formed in the
Virginia Colony in 1754 from
Amelia County. It was named for
Prince Edward, second son of
Frederick, Prince of Wales, and younger brother of
George III of the United Kingdom. The original
county seat housed the courthouse and was called Prince Edward Courthouse; it is now the village of
Worsham. Near the headwaters of the
Appomattox River, the Town of
Farmville was formed in 1798 and was incorporated in 1912. The county seat was moved from Worsham to Farmville in 1871.
Railroads In the 1850s, the
Southside Railroad between
Petersburg and
Lynchburg was built through Farmville between
Burkeville and
Pamplin City. The route, which was subsidized by a contribution from Farmville, required an expensive crossing of the Appomattox River slightly downstream which became known as the
High Bridge. The Southside Railroad was heavily damaged during the
American Civil War. The
High Bridge played a key role during Confederate General
Robert E. Lee's final retreat from Petersburg to
Appomattox Courthouse, where the surrender to Union General
Ulysses S. Grant took place in April 1865. After the Civil War, under the leadership of former Confederate General
William "Billy" Mahone, the Southside Railroad was rebuilt. In 1870, it was combined with the
Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad and the
Virginia and Tennessee Railroad to form Mahone's
Atlantic, Mississippi and Ohio Railroad (AM&O), which extended 400 miles across the southern tier of Virginia from
Norfolk on
Hampton Roads to
Bristol. After the
Financial Panic of 1873, the AM&O fell into default on its debt; it was purchased in the early 1880s by new owners who renamed it the
Norfolk and Western (N&W). In 1982, it became part of the current
Norfolk Southern Railway system. Due to the high cost of maintaining the High Bridge over the Appomattox River, the line through Farmville was downgraded and eventually abandoned, in favor of the
Farmville Belt Line, which had been built on a more direct line between Burkeville and Pamplin City, as had originally been envisioned in the planning for the Southside Railroad. Another railroad formerly served Farmville. In the late 19th century, the
narrow gauge Farmville and Powhatan Railroad was built from Farmville through
Cumberland,
Powhatan, and
Chesterfield counties to reach
Bermuda Hundred on the navigable portion of the
James River near its confluence with the
Appomattox River at
City Point. It was later renamed the
Tidewater and Western Railroad, but was dismantled in the early 20th century.
Desegregation Prince Edward County is the source of
Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward County, a case incorporated into
Brown v. Board of Education, which ultimately resulted in the
U.S. Supreme Court decision that racially segregated public schools were unconstitutional. This ultimately led to the desegregation of all U.S. public schools. Among the five cases decided under
Brown, Davis was the only one initiated by students, after they walked out in 1951 to protest overcrowding and poor conditions at their segregated school under
Jim Crow laws. The all-black R.R. Moton High School, named after
Robert Russa Moton, a noted educator from neighboring
Amelia County, did not have a gymnasium, cafeteria, or teachers' restrooms. Due to overcrowding, three plywood buildings had been erected, and some students had to take classes in a school bus parked outside. Teachers and students did not have desks or blackboards. The school's requests for additional funds were denied by the all-white school board. On Monday, April 23, 1951,
Barbara Johns, the sixteen-year-old niece of
Reverend Vernon Johns, a civil rights activist, led students who staged a walkout protesting the conditions. The
NAACP took up their case when the students agreed to petition for an integrated school rather than improved conditions at their black school. This vote passed by one count.
Howard University-trained attorneys
Spottswood W. Robinson and
Oliver Hill filed suit against the county school system on behalf of the students. As in other
Southern states, since the turn of the twentieth century black voters in Virginia had been largely
disenfranchised, which resulted in their lacking political power. In
Davis v. County School Board of Prince Edward County, a state court rejected the suit, agreeing with defense attorney
T. Justin Moore that Virginia was vigorously equalizing conditions in black and white schools. The state verdict was appealed to the
U.S. District Court, which ruled for the plaintiffs, a decision the school district and the state appealed. Subsequently, it was one of five cases incorporated into
Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark case in which the U.S. Supreme Court in 1954 ruled that segregated public schools were unconstitutional.
Massive Resistance In 1956, the
Virginia General Assembly passed a series of laws (the
Stanley Plan) to implement
Massive Resistance, a policy promoted by the
Byrd Organization led by U.S. Senator
Harry F. Byrd, to avoid compliance with the Supreme Court ruling in
Brown and its direction to integrate public schools. The state legislature (overwhelmingly dominated by whites since disfranchisement of African Americans in the state in the early 1900s) created a program of "tuition grants," which could be given to students so they could attend a private school of their choice. In practice, this meant state support of all-white schools that were developed as a way to evade integration of public schools. These newly formed schools became known as the "
segregation academies". As a result of the
Brown decision, and changes in Virginia laws, in 1959, the Board of Supervisors for Prince Edward County refused to appropriate
any funds at all for the County School Board. It effectively closed all public schools rather than integrate them. The
Prince Edward County Public Schools remained closed for five years. While other Virginia and some southern school systems resisted integration, Prince Edward County was the only school district in the country to resort to such extreme measures. During the interruption in access to Prince Edward County's public schools, white parents established the Prince Edward Foundation. It founded a series of private schools restricted to white children. These schools were supported by the tuition grants from the state and tax credits from the county. Collectively they became known as "
Prince Edward Academy", one of Virginia's "segregation academies". Prince Edward Academy operated as the
de facto school system and enrolled K-12 students at a number of facilities throughout the county. From 1959 to 1964, black students in Prince Edward County had to go to school elsewhere or forgo their education altogether. Some got schooling by living with relatives in nearby communities or at makeshift schools the community created in church basements. Others were educated out of state with funds raised by groups such as the
Quakers. In the final year (1963–1964), the NAACP-sponsored
Prince Edward Free School picked up some of the slack by educating some of the black youth who had been unable to leave the county to attend public schools elsewhere. In 1963, federal district courts ordered the public schools to open; Prince Edward County appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. Ruling in
Griffin v. County School Board of Prince Edward County, the Court unanimously agreed in May 1964 that Prince Edward County's actions violated the
Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment. At that point, county and state supervisors gave in rather than risk prosecution and prison, ending the era of Massive Resistance in Virginia. The same summer, following the Griffith ruling, 16 students from
Queens College (New York) ventured south to Prince Edward County during their "Student Help Project" Program, a precursor to the 1964
Mississippi Freedom Summer. The students served as teachers to the many African-American children who had been denied an education. These volunteers worked with the students to prepare them to resume classes when schools reopened that fall. The volunteers from Queens College were housed among leading African-American families in the county that summer. They used local churches as school houses during the week. Many of the students involved in the program have since donated their archives to the Queens College Department of Special Collections and Archives. As a result of Prince Edward County's actions, some students missed part or all of their education for five years. This group has been called the "Lost Generation" of Prince Edward County's youth.
Private education since 1964 Even after the re-opening of the public schools, Prince Edward Academy remained segregated. Many of the segregated academies in Virginia eventually closed; others changed their missions and eliminated discriminatory policies. Some yielded on integration only after the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) revoked the tax-free status of non-profit discriminatory private schools. Prince Edward Academy was one of the latter and lost its tax-exempt status in 1978. In 1986, the school began to accept all students regardless of race or ethnicity. It was renamed the
Fuqua School in 1992, in honor of
J. B. Fuqua, a wealthy businessman who was born in Farmville and was a strong supporter of the school in its early years. Fuqua remains the only large private school in Prince Edward County, but a few other smaller private schools have been opened in recent decades.
Robert Russa Moton Museum The former R.R. Moton High School building in Farmville has been recognized as a nationally significant community landmark. In 1998, it was designated a
National Historic Landmark. It now houses the
Robert Russa Moton Museum, a center for the study of
civil rights in education. ==Geography==