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SMCM
Professor Merideth Taylor
Receives Historic Preservation Service Award

Press Release
#10-117
(St. Mary’s
City, MD) May 26, 2010— Merideth Taylor,
professor of theater and dance at St. Mary’s
College of Maryland (SMCM), received a 2010
Historic Preservation Service Award for her
documentary “With All Deliberate Speed: One High
School’s Story.” The documentary, about the
desegregation of Great Mills High School in
Southern Maryland, was written, directed, and
produced by Taylor and edited by David Taylor
and Bryan Tosh at Phocus Video. The award was
presented by the St. Mary’s County Board of
Commissioners and the members of the St. Mary’s
County Historic Preservation Commission.
“I'm grateful
to Janice Walthour and Mary Washington for
nominating me and have found the community’s
response to the film very gratifying,” said
Taylor. “I'm hoping that the award will bring
renewed attention to the film and that more
people will see it as a result. In addition to
its availability in libraries, on YouTube and on
local cable TV stations, I've been providing
personal copies to individuals for a $20
donation to Unified Committee for Afro-American
Contribution’s fund for the erection of a
monument to the United States Colored Troops.
I'm particularly happy to know that the St.
Mary's County Public Schools plans to integrate
the documentary into the social studies
curriculum.”
“It is
important that all citizens of St. Mary’s County
recognize our role in the segregation era and
the desegregation period that followed,” said
Francis Jack Russell, president of the County
Commissioners. “We must be familiar with the
hardships that local African Americans faced
during the integration of segregated high
schools and Merideth’s documentary plays an
important role in educating the public about
this transition period.”
Taylor’s
documentary gives voice to those who experienced
the desegregation process at Great Mills High
School between 1958 and 1972. It also outlines
the difficult transition period of integrating
the segregated high schools’ communities. The
film was screened at this year’s sixth annual
Southern Maryland Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Prayer Breakfast at SMCM. The video can be
viewed on YouTube at
http://www.youtube.com/profile?user=smcm#p/u/2/qg7TXldDgYw.
A grant from the PNC Foundation Legacy Project
and the Maryland Humanities Council made the
documentary possible.
The Historic
Preservation Awards began in the spring of 1999
and are given to businesses, organizations, or
individuals who demonstrate outstanding
achievement in and support for furthering the
aims of historic preservation in St. Mary’s
County through education, research, development,
community leadership, and planning advocacy.
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