Nathaniel Rochester middle school renamed after Black educator Alice Holloway Young 

Alice Holloway Young being interviewed by WXXI president Norm Silverstein in 2018.

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Alice Holloway Young being interviewed by WXXI president Norm Silverstein in 2018.

The Rochester City School Board voted to rename Nathaniel Rochester Middle School No. 3 to the Dr. Alice Holloway Young School of Excellence on Thursday.

The move comes after a petition to change the school’s name since Rochester, who founded the city in the 1800s, enslaved Black people.

Young, one of five names nominated for renaming the school, was the district’s first Black principal and pioneered the district’s urban-suburban program which still exists today.

“What a powerful example of what a Rochestarian can do to make a change in our community,” said School Board President Van White ahead of the vote. “So, I consider it an honor to be around to have this discussion with my colleagues.”

During Thursday night's meeting, White actually was the only board member voting against the name-change, but that was due to issues he had with how the name change process was handled. He wanted to wait until the start of the school year to more thoroughly work on public engagement over the change.

District officials said that after a petition was presented to RCSD Superintendent Lesli Myers-Small asking for the name change to be considered, a community forum was held on June 23 where seven speakers participated.

Young was also a founding trustee of Monroe Community College. Earlier this year she was awarded the Liberty Medal, the highest award the state Senate can grant.

“This is truly an unexpected honor,” Young told WXXI News on Thursday about renaming the school in her honor. “It makes me speechless.”

In an interview with WXXI-TV for the program Norm & Company in 2018, Young recounted her first job at a migrant camp. She noticed the workers would sign their name with “X.”

“So I said, ‘You’re going to learn to write your name before you leave,’ and after working all day in the hot field they come to me and learn to write their names,” Young told WXXI President Norm Silverstein. “It was then I decided I was going to become a teacher.”



Young, who is now 97, said on Thursday that education was a core value in her family. Though her father was unable to complete his schooling for lack of opportunities, when she was a child, her parents moved from Virginia to North Carolina so that she could attend a school that accepted African Americans.

“To have to make so much sacrifice just to go to a school is overwhelming and then now to have a school named in my name, that’s very humbling.”

Noelle Evans is a reporter for WXXI, a media partner of CITY.

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