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Black History Month poster contest honors black educators

The three winners of the Black History Month Poster Contest stand with some of the award-winning posters Friday at the contest reception at UHV. Austin Valentine, left, a DeLeon Elementary School fifth-grade student, won first place for his poster about Harold Cade. Kooper Wilkerson, a fifth-grader at Vickers Elementary School, won second place, and DeLeon fifth-grader Gage Goldman won third.

When Austin Valentine chose someone to make a poster about, he decided to go with a personal connection.

The DeLeon Elementary School fifth-grader chose to make a poster about Harold Cade, a Victoria educator who was his father’s principal and now has a school named after him in the Victoria Independent School District.

Austin was awarded first place Friday during the Black History Month Poster Contest reception at the University of Houston-Victoria. He received a $2,000 UHV scholarship and a Victoria College summer camp voucher.

Vic Morgan

The theme for this year’s contest was Black Educators. Fifth-graders across Victoria Independent School District submitted 140 posters for the contest. The posters were judged by representatives from UHV, Victoria College and the Victoria Black History Steering Committee Inc.

“It is an honor to participate in this celebration of important parts of America’s culture,” UHV President Vic Morgan said. “This contest gives these talented fifth-graders the opportunity to research and learn about the history of black educators and other influential figures who have impacted Victoria and the nation.”

When he was researching Cade for his poster, Austin went to the educator’s home and spoke to him in person. The information from that interview was incorporated into the poster. Austin also included a photo of himself with Cade.

“It’s very exciting to win this contest, and I really liked getting to meet Harold Cade,” Austin said. “I learned about all kinds of things, like how he lived through segregation and started working in education. When I started this project, I didn’t know he was a principal and had a school named after him.”

Kooper Wilkerson, a fifth-grade student at Vickers Elementary School, received second place for his poster about Alice Ora Wilkins. He won a $1,000 scholarship and a VC summer camp waiver. He made his poster about Wilkins after finding her headstone as part of a graveyard tour.

“She was the first female black teacher at the Port Lavaca Colored School at the age of 16,” Kooper said.

Gage Goldman, a fifth-grader at DeLeon, earned third place with his poster about Martha Morrow Foxx. He received a $500 scholarship and a VC summer camp waiver.

Honorable mention selections in the poster contest were:

  • Arthur Avila, Vickers Elementary School
  • Haley Beckner, Vickers Elementary School
  • Amelia Cavazos, Smith Elementary School
  • Daysha Lugaro, Dudley Elementary School

They received gift bags from UHV and VC.

The ceremony included remarks from Morgan; Susan Prukop, Victoria College development director; and James Murphy Jr., Victoria Black History Steering Committee Inc. member.

The posters will be on display through February in the UHV University Center, 3007 N. Ben Wilson St.

The University of Houston-Victoria, located in the heart of the Coastal Bend region since 1973 in Victoria, Texas, offers courses leading to more than 80 academic programs in the schools of Arts & Sciences; Business Administration; and Education, Health Professions & Human Development. UHV provides face-to-face classes at its Victoria campus, as well as an instructional site in Katy, Texas, and online classes that students can take from anywhere. UHV supports the American Association of State Colleges and Universities Opportunities for All initiative to increase awareness about state colleges and universities and the important role they have in providing a high-quality and accessible education to an increasingly diverse student population, as well as contributing to regional and state economic development.