Beulah Ralph And Her Elementary School

Memorial In Front Of Douglass High School

Photo by Devry Becker Jones taken on March 21, 2021

On January 31, 1921, Beulah Ralph was born in Hardin, Missouri. Beulah moved to Columbia as a child and graduated from the black only Douglass High School in 1945, at a time when public education was still segregated by race. After graduating she returned to Columbia Public Schools and Douglass as an employee. For 20 years she was a school secretary at her Alma Mater. Her almost sixty year long career as an educator would span the period of desegregation, a process she helped guide the district through. In 1960, Douglass High School closed, six years after the landmark 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled unanimously that racial segregation of children in public schools was unconstitutional. In 1967, during the civil rights era Beulah Ralph founded Columbia Public School’s Home School Communicator Program, which she developed and directed. A tireless community leader and mentor, “Beulah was probably the most well-known person in the Columbia Public Schools by the entire citizenry,” said Eliot Battle. Former Columbia Mayor Darwin Hindman spoke about her saying: “If there ever was a person who carried the zeal for fostering individual dignity, racial equality, understanding, peace-making and solving problems through non-violence, it was Beulah Ralph." She died, at the age of 83, on Nov. 17, 2010. In 2016, Beulah Ralph Elementary School was dedicated to her memory.

Beulah Ralph Elementary School opened August 16, 2016. It is located in southwest Columbia, at the corner of Scott Boulevard and Highway KK, near the Thornbrook subdivision. When it opened it was Columbia’s 21st elementary school, built to address growth and overcrowding at nearby schools, especially Mill Creek Elementary. It was designed by Columbia based PWArchitects Inc. and used the design of Eliot Battle Elementary school as a prototype. Its architectural style is contemporary. The project cost $16 million to build an 89,000 square foot building on a 36-acre site. Designed to accommodate 450 students, school features include: a studio classroom with a one-way mirror for teachers in training to observe, temperature-controlled computer storage cupboards for student laptops and iPads, energy-efficient climate control, lighting operated by sensors, and stormwater management facilities. Columbia Public Schools Superintendent Peter Stiepleman remarked at the dedication ceremony that Beulah Ralph had been "a living legend, one of the most valuable players" in CPS history. The school enrolled 690 students in 2021, 65% white, 11% black, and is more ethnically diverse than Columbia’s demographics as a whole, 76% white, 11% black. Beulah Ralph’s only daughter spoke to the Missourian, after her mother’s death in 2010 saying Ralph’s work “wasn’t for minority students, it was for everyone….to her, children and families were all the same. A child with a problem is a child with a problem, regardless of the color of their skin.”

Beulah Ralph Elementary School

From PWArchitects.com

Inspired by the honoring of a historic Columbian with a contemporary building, our group, CoMo Preservation, hopes to help homeowners, landlords, and institutions prevent the destruction of historic architecture. Original period styles might be replicated, but will forever lack the social history of authentic structures. The preservation of historic buildings is necessary for Columbia’s residents, students, and visitors to achieve a sense of place and, it follows, for our city’s continued economic success. If you want to join us in our mission sign up for our mailing list to receive news and updates.


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Matt Fetterly

Matt was born in Columbia, Missouri and is an 8th generation Boone Countian. He is an alumni of Hickman High School and the University of Missouri. Since 2011 he has worked for Shakespeares Pizza, as a truck driver and distribution manager, visiting and selling locally produced frozen pizza in all 115 Missouri counties, as well as Kansas, Illinois, and Nebraska. He is also a professional percussionist, working at the Arrow Rock Lyceum Theatre since 2012, and has performed with the Maples Repertory Theatre, Central Methodist Theater, University of Missouri Theater, Columbia Entertainment Company, Talking Horse Productions, Maplewood Barn Theater, Columbia Community Band, Columbia Jazz Orchestra, Columbia Civic Orchestra, Columbia Chorale, The Tipper Gores, Columbia Handbell Ensemble, and the 9th Street Philharmonic. A lifelong love of Columbia inspired him to preserve a growing collection of over 170 books about Columbia and Boone County. A related project is preserving and cataloguing books and ephemera manufactured by the E.W. Stephens Publishing Company, once Columbia’s largest business. He specializes in local natural history, black history, indigenous history, lgbtq+ history, and cultural history more generally (particularly architecture, music, art, theater, and cemeteries). When not playing music or writing about local history, he enjoys hiking, caving, camping, and floating, in the forest and prairies of Mid-Missouri.

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Columbia Cemetery And The Farley Mausoleum

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Wabash Station, A Massacre, and Columbia’s First Railroad