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Ralph Ellison and African American History in Oklahoma City
Item 10 of 34
This is a contributing entry for Ralph Ellison and African American History in Oklahoma City and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

This impressive brick school was built for the exclusive use of white children in 1911 while Black children had to walk a mile south through the railyards to wood-frame Douglass School. Still, Ralph and other African American boys learned to march and drill from Black Spanish-American War and WW I veterans on the grounds of Bryant School on weekends. In 1947 the school was converted to a segregated school for Black children and renamed Inman Page School.


Bryant School

Plant, Building, Window, Snow

Bryant School

Building, Plant, Tree, Window

Map Detail of Bryant School, Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, Oklahoma

Schematic, Font, Rectangle, Parallel

Bryant School, an elementary school for white students, was located a block from the Ellison house on Geary, and from that distance, the young Ralph could see the school from his front porch. Not being able to attend the white school because of segregation, he felt the irony of having to walk eight blocks to Douglass, the school serving Black children from elementary through high school. The long walk took Ellison and other Geary street children through alley ways and the busy streets of the East First Street business district, and over the switch engines and trains of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific lines via a steel viaduct and straight down Walnut Avenue. Parents like Ida Ellison were appalled at their children's exposure to the underworld inhabitants of this corridor, but for Ellison the experience of seeing prostitutes and pimps became both a cultural and racial education: “...once the tracks were safely negotiated you continued past warehouse, factories, and loading docks, and then through a notorious red light district where Black prostitutes in brightly colored housecoats and Mary Jane shoes supplied the fantasies and needs of a white clientele.”

Ellison, Ralph. The Collected Essays of Ralph Ellison. New York City, New York. Modern Library, 1995.

Jackson, Lawrence. Ralph Ellison: The Emergence of Genius. New York City, New York. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2002.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

https://www.metrolibrary.org/archives/image/2020/03/bryant-school-0

https://www.metrolibrary.org/archives/image/2020/09/bryant-school

https://www.loc.gov/resource/g4024om.g4024om_g07202192202/?sp=4&r=-0.12,0.392,0.88,0.494,0