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Herman Boone
is a teacher, retired football coach, and a true symbol of social
transformation. Herman Boone is a motivator of young people of
all races and is a genuine inspiration to many people of varied
circumstances and diverse backgrounds.
A native of Rocky
Mount North Carolina, he is one of twelve children. He was born
October 28,1935, to the late Frank and Daisy Boone. After attending
the Abraham Lincoln Elementary School, he went on to graduate
from the Booker T. Washington High School in 1954.
Herman, known
in North Carolina as Ike, was an outstanding athlete.
His pursuit of excellence took him to North Carolina College
in Durham, NC. Where, in 1958, he received his B.A. and M.S.
Degrees.
As a young person,
Herman was highly recruited and he decided to become a teacher
and coach, so that he might motivate other youngsters, as he
had been early in his childhood.
In 1958 Herman
accepted his first teaching and coaching position at the I.H.
Foster High School in Blackstone, Virginia, where he coached
football, basketball and baseball. His teams were outstanding
with very impressive statistics with twenty-six wins, six losses
and three district championships.
While at Blackstone,
Virginia, Herman met his wife Carol, a quiet unassuming person,
who touched his heart as no other person had. Herman and Carol
have been married now for thirty-eight years and they are the
proud parents of three wonderful daughters, Sharon, Donna and
Monica, and also the gratifying grandparents of Mackenzie and
Lauren.
In 1961, Herman
fulfilled his strong desire to return to his home state of North
Carolina to continue his coaching and teaching career. He accepted
a coaching position at the E.J. Hayes High School in Williamson,
NC. Inspired and motivated to win, his football teams in North
Carolina amassed an astonishing record of 99 wins and 8 losses
in a nine-year period. His 1966 football team was recognized
by Scholastic Coachs Magazine as The Number One Football
Team in America. Herman has been selected coach of the
year six times and is the author of many articles for several
national magazines.
In 1969, the
Williamston, NC school board informed Herman that the town of
Williamson was not ready for a black head coach,
so with mixed emotions, Herman accepted an assistant football
coaching position at T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria,
Virginia.
In 1971, the
city of Alexandria decided to totally integrate its school system
and appointed Herman as its first consolidated head football
coach over a legendary white coach with several years seniority
and a steadfast citywide following. He was honored to have been
selected, but extremely apprehensive about the challenges that
lay ahead.
Remarkably, Herman
was able to pull together and solidify a diverse coaching staff
and an unfocused group young boys into the most powerful football
team in the state of Virginia. This team was ranked second in
the nation by national polls.
The willingness
of these young men to talk to each other, along with their determination
to win, brought together a city torn apart by prejudice and hatred.
In December 1971, president Richard M. Nixon was quoted as saying,
the team saved the city of Alexandria.
Although history
might not remember the names of such people as Herman Boone and
Bill Yoast, it is because of us that Virginia and now the world
will always remember the Titans of Alexandria. |