| Vermelle Diamond Ely One of the first students to graduate in 1949 in the
Second Ward gym that still stands as an icon of a forgotten time,
Vermelle has enjoyed a busy and productive life. After graduating
from high school, Vermelle entered Shaw University, majoring in
elementary education, and upon receiving her Bachelor of Arts degree,
signed up for graduate classes at New York University. Following
in her father's education footsteps, she taught first grade at Marie
G. School, a school for Blacks, for 17 years, and after desegregation
she taught first grade at Pineville Elementary School until 1985.
Although she and her husband had no children, she fulfilled her
life by loving the children she taught. Her father, the French teacher at Second Ward, also
taught her the art of collecting pictures and films. In fact, it
was this hobby that landed her the film made at Second Ward High
School that became the basis of A Colored School. "One of my instructors at Second Ward retired,
and her son donated it to me," she remembers. For Vermelle, the gift started a lifetime of actively
preserving the history she had known. She began the Second Ward
High School National Alumni Foundation, chartered in 1980, and began
to collect artifacts from Second Ward High School and the neighborhood
that surrounded it. Soon after she established the Foundation, the
city of Charlotte donated a marker for the land on which Second
Ward High School originally stood. She worked at revitalizing the
Second Ward neighborhood and bought a small house to turn into a
small museum. In addition to performing duties as director of the
museum and the historian for the foundation, Vermelle also organizes
the annual Second Ward High School reunion, an event in August that
typically draws at least 200 alumni to a basketball games, jazz
and comedy hour and dance. "Second Ward was a home away from home,"
Vermelle says. "Everybody was made to feel a part of it, and
we were taught self-respect." Her favorite memories were being elected homecoming
queen in 1948 and 1949 and watching the basketball games between
fierce rivals Second Ward and West Charlotte High. Today she entertains
her brother and nephew and functions as an advocate with the City
Council to salvage the Second Ward gym, the only remaining structure
of the original high school. Margaret
Alexander | Vermelle Diamond Ely
| Odell Robinson | Bill
Yongue |
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