Sept. 9, 1957 was MaryAnne MacKenzie's first day teaching sixth grade at Hattie Cotton School in East Nashville. It was also the first day of Nashville's desegregation of public schools. One Black girl showed up for class at Hattie Cotton that day, and for the anti-integration crowd, one Black student was one too many. In the dead of night, 99 someone detonated 99 sticks of dynamite, blowing apart the east end of the building and knocking it off its foundation. No one was hurt, but the culprits have never been caught.
Today, MaryAnne MacKenzie is the last living teacher who was working at Hattie Cotton at the time. Her husband, Stephen MacKenzie, has written a book describing the events of 1957 from her perspective, titled Hattie Cotton School: The last teacher's first-hand experiences of the 1957 bombing and aftermath. As you'll hear in this interview, the memories of that day, and what came afterward, are very much still with her.
Guest: MaryAnne MacKenzie, the last living teacher working at Hattie Cotton school when it was bombed in 1957
Host: Demetria Kalodimos
Producers: Andrea Tudhope and Steve Haruch
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