Agenda Item: City of Brownsville Commission meeting, 4 p.m. Tuesday Aug. 6, 2019
Special to El RrunRrun
After having heard from Juan Rene Hernandez, a longtime resident of E. Fronton Street at their July 31 meeting on how changing that street's name to McNair Family Drive contradicted the city's historical preservation efforts, commissioner Ben Neece said that an item on the city commission's next meeting agenda would be placed to reconsider the renaming of the thoroughfare.
Hernandez pointed out that while the residents had nothing against the McNair family, the history of the thoroughfare in the city's existence bore more importance than an individual family. He pointed out that:
1. El Fronton was one of the original city streets dating back to 1850.
2. That the street dated back some 169 years
3. That it was the only street in downtown Brownsville with a Spanish name
4. That it was the site where Afro-American populations had lived since the 1900s, and that Mitte Pullam, a black educator, ran the very first Frederick Douglass Elementary schoolhouse on Fronton St. before desegregation in Texas.
She was the teacher for all grades and the principal of the school for black children and lived there. According to newspaper reports of the time, the school was exceptional and the children were being taught at the same level as the best of the white private schools.
After desegregation, she taught at Skinner Elementary and was recognized Teacher of the Year. Pullam was honored by having a new $40 million dollar elementary school building named after her in Brownsville.
5. That in 1889, E. Fronton Street it was the site for the switching yards of the newly-established St. Louis, Brownsville, Mexico Railroad.
Hernandez pointed out that the McNair family already had a park named after them on nearby St. Charles.
The commission also voted to adopt the ordinance defining the process by which streets are named. When the street was renamed after the McNairs, commissioner Rose Gowen asked city manager Noel Bernal to study the possibility of passing a city policy on renaming streets.
Interestingly, one of the first no-nos in city manager Bernal's policy included in Resolution Number 2019-069 is that streets should not be named "after living persons, other than a recognized national figure...," which would have prevented the name change if it had been in the books before the May 21 meeting.
While addressing the commission in the May 21 meeting, pro-renaming resident Enrique Mellizo assured the commissioners that "only 14" property owners of the 144 lots on the stretch of E. Fronton mailed letters of concern about the renaming.
What he didn't say - and that which Engineering Director Carlos Lastra included in this month's meeting packets - is that "only" four letters were received in support of the name change. Mellizo was able to procure "only" 30 names for the petition of the 144 property owners.
Obviously, there wasn't a groundswell of support for the change although Mellizo made it seem like the natives were clamoring for the McNair family to be enshrined forever along the historical route. This Tuesday, that knee-jerk vote to rename the street will be considered in an action item.
15 comments:
Good, Fronton is a part of Brownsville history and the name should endure for generations to come.
Blimp had it as Fulton Street! What an idiot.
- Booby Weightman-Ramirez
The real question concerning the name change is, who's idea it was to change it to McNair? I would like to know who's the pendejo who's ideal it was. I'm glad it will be changed back to Frontón.
Bravo, Mr. Hernandez! You made the City come to their senses. You proved that just one sane and informed voice counts!!!!
"BISD employee accused of having improper relationship with student"local paper.
When is going to stop BISD? My children will go to a private school next semester.
Many yrs. ago, the community of Our Lady of Good counsel (In the Las Prietas neighborhood)asked to rename a street near the church after a well liked and respected priest. Father Mestas drive. I knew father Mestas because he had been a priest in the Portway Acres community where I lived in the 1980's. He truly cared for the poor and needy and was a real servant to the community. He was moved from our mission to his own leadership role to Our Lady of Good council that had a mission church in the community of san Pedro.
THE CITIZENS residing on that drive made a formal petition to the city commission requesting rhe street be named in honor of father Mestas, around a yr. and a half still had to pass for the commission to approve such request. The whole barrio, the community of Las Prietas , La Galaxia, ALL signed, presented proof of what and how father Mestas had been a positive influence in their community.
I am telling this story because I am interested to know if the residents of Fronton street requested the name change and if they had to follow the same protocols that were asked of the citizens in Las Prietas. I DONT have anything against the name change, but, Jaime Zapata served his country, Father Mestas served the poor and needy, being from a rich family is enough to have a street name changed. Oh, I forgot, in the era of DT being rich is enough.
NAME RECONIGITION ONLY...JUST BECAUSE THEY OWN WAREHOUSES ON THAT STREET DOES NOT MEAN THEY HAVE RIGHT TO HAVE THEIR NAME ON THAT STREET!!! THE ORIGINAL NAME OF THE STREET SHOULD STAY THE SAME REFECTING A LONG TIME HISTORIAL HISTORY OF THE STREET AND RESIDENCES WHO LIVE ON THE STREET ICLUDING THOSE WHO LIVED IN THE PAST ESPECIALLY THOSE AFICIAN AMERICANS WHO OCCUPPIED THE AREA!!!! COMMISSIONERS... LEAVE THE NAME FRONTON STREET ALONE AND CONCERNTRATE ON OTHER IMPORTAMT MATTERS OF THE CITY!!!!
Please don't make the mistake of thinking that your children are more safe in a private school rather than a public school. Do the research and use Google terms such as: "Private school improper educator and student relationship, private school teacher-student relationships", etc. Also, take the time in an age appropriate way to teach your own children about privacy, personal boundaries, improper touching, no secrets, etc.
Dirty Harry McNair. Glad Pete Benavides beat you by a landslide..
@August 3, 2019 at 7:14 PM
Must be a teacher alway blaming somebody else I guess three months is not enough and with pay. Go take a hike who ever you are.
For your info texas is rated number ONE in the NATION in teacher abuse of students want MORE?
@August 3, 2019 at 7:14 PM
I think you posted in the wrong area. We all make mistakes regardless private or public.
Donald Trump and the political action committees for Mitch McConnell, Marco Rubio, Scott Walker, Lindsey Graham, John Kasich and John McCain accepted $7.35 million in contributions from a Ukrainian-born oligarch who is the business partner of two of Russian president Vladimir Putin's favorite oligarchs and a Russian government bank. Blavatnik contributed $6.35 million to leading Republican candidates and incumbent senators. Mitch McConnell was the top recipient of Blavatnik's donations, collecting $2.5 million for his GOP Senate Leadership Fund under the names of two of Blavatnik's holding companies, Access Industries and AI Altep Holdings, according to Federal Election Commission documents and Opensecrets.
Quit messing with Texas history. Don’t change any street names.
The name changing continues the city of brownsville commission and the mayor don't want any more streets with hispanic names or numbers (uno-dos-tres). Vote again for the cocos and wanna be whites. Invite them all for a shopping spree you know where and feel at home while you're there idiota cocos you'll have a big bang...
are we gonna call them me(x)gasuras now not negasuras
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