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Union Public Schools dedicated its 13th elementary school – Jefferson Elementary School, 8418 S. 107 E. Ave., on Thursday, November 6. The school opened on August 14, 2008.

  • Principal's Comments
  • Board of Education President's Comments

    Superintendent Dr. Cathy Burden and Board of Education President Scott McDaniel made remarks at the dedication which featured performances by students and tours of the new school. Principal Kim Whiteley provided an oral history of the school, and the school choir – the Monticello Musicians – performed Thankful for the U.S.A.

    Jefferson opened August 14, 2008, providing for expansion of the program for four-year-olds districtwide. Voters approved the construction and furnishing of the school through a series of bond elections starting in 2006. The first bond election was for $2.5 million for site development, soil testing, engineering and architectural consultants. The second bond election in 2007 included $9.5 million for construction of the site, while voters approved another $1.9 million for furniture, fixtures and equipment at the school.

    Jefferson is modeled after Union’s 12th elementary school, Rosa Parks, 13702 E. 46th Place. While Jefferson is slightly smaller in area, the ceilings are higher than those at Rosa Parks giving the appearance of more room in the school. The architect is PSA-Dewberry and the construction manager is Flintco, Inc.

    The dedication is the third time Union has celebrated the opening of a new facility this school year. Union held the grand opening of its Rosa Parks Early Childhood Center, 13804 E. 46th Place, on September 18. And on September 26, Union hosted a community picnic to celebrate the opening of the new Central Park at Union near 61st and Mingo

    Jefferson Elementary School

    Principal Kim Rampey poses with students from Jefferson behind one of many walls adorned with famous quotes from our third president. Pictured are: (left to right) Angie Bongiovanni and Jake Harris, and (back) Hannah Anderson, Kim Whiteley and Navid Majidizadeh. At bottom, are additional images.

     Following is the speech Principal Kim Wilson gave at the dedication.

     Principal Kim Rampey - Download speech
    History of Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Jefferson Elementary School
    Thursday, November 6, 2008

    Building a school is a monumental task.  Selecting a name for that school that the community will rally behind and support is just as important.  With Thomas Jefferson we have done just that. 

    Thomas Jefferson wished to be remembered for three accomplishments from his public life though there are many more for which he was known.  He was governor of Virginia.  He served as the United States Minister to France.  He was Secretary of State for President George Washington.  He served as Vice President for John Adams.  He was elected our president from 1801-1809.  On his tombstone, however, for which he himself wrote the inscription, only these three accomplishments appear: 

    • He was the author of the Declaration of  Independence
    • He was the author of the Statute of Virginia for religious freedom
    • He was the Father of the University of Virginia.
  • Our country declared its independence through his words.  Our country more than doubled its size through his commissioning of the Lewis and Clark expedition during his presidency.  Our country’s children today are assured a free and public education through his strong-held belief that educating the masses was the only sure way to ensure our liberty was preserved.

    Our students at Jefferson Elementary study language arts, mathematics, science, social studies and the arts due in part to his efforts.  Thomas Jefferson had faith in the common man.  He believed the common man could elect wise and virtuous leaders if, and only if, that common man was educated. 

    Speaking in April of 2010 at a commemoration for Thomas Jefferson’s birthday, President Bush had these words: “Jefferson can be quoted by the hour.  He lived a long time ago, yet, he still speaks directly to the present.”  This is evident as one walks through the halls of this school for our walls are adorned with quotes by Jefferson; quotes that are as timely today as they were when he spoke them for the first time. 

    In our entryway you’ll read, “Educate and inform the whole mass of people…..they are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty.”  In our Pre-K pod, “Honesty is the first chapter in the book of wisdom.”  Our kindergarten pod contains, “Peace and friendship with all mankind is our wisest policy…”  In our 1st/2nd grade area, “Whenever you do a thing, act as if the world were watching.”  In 2nd/3rd grade, “When you reach the end of your rope, tie a knot in it and hang on.”  4th grade, “Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today.”  In our 5th grade pod, “For here we are not afraid to follow truth, wherever it may lead.”  In our media center are two quotes.  The first is, “I cannot live without books.”  The second, and perhaps his most famous of quotes, “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

    Thomas Jefferson was a remarkable man and we the staff and students at Jefferson Elementary will strive for years to come to bring honor to his name.  
     

     

    Scott McDaniel - Download speech
    Board of Education president
    Thursday, November 6.

    Jefferson Elementary School

    Board of Education President Scott McDaniel talks about the legacy of Thomas Jefferson, America's third presidents, during a dedication ceremony at the president's namesake school. Below are additional images.

    It’s with great pride that we celebrate and dedicate this, our newest school.

    On behalf of the school board I want to express our heartfelt gratitude to all those who made this day possible.  To the members of our district’s long-range planning committee and the dedicated team of administrators who work tireless hours anticipating our needs so that they can bring the school board their recommendations for how we will continue to meet the needs of our growing district; to Dr. Burden for her ever thoughtful and effective leadership of this district; to the architects, engineers, construction managers and contractors who are on board with our vision, and who have delivered such a superior school for our students and staff.  And to the patrons of Union school district who showed us the support to purchase this land and to build this school – we have honored your trust.

    So we are proud of the brick and mortar, the tile and the glass; but we are most proud of you – the thousands of students who will experience the joy of learning here, and the many teachers and support staff who will pour out the fruits of their beings here to make the world a better place for these children over the decades to come.

    The challenge we faced in selecting a name for our new school that expressed our pride proved to be easy to overcome.  We wanted to name this school for a person who would bring meaning and identity to this school and for someone of whom we can all be proud.  We also wanted the very name of the school to speak to its students and to provide teaching moments derived from the life of its namesake.  Thomas Jefferson was the perfect choice.

    The presidential election experience we all shared this week and the peaceful transition of power in the seat of our federal government that is taking place is the direct result of the democratic republic that Jefferson helped to design, create and which he defended for his entire life.  Of our nation’s founding fathers that our students study, Thomas Jefferson may well be the most interesting and complicated .Jefferson Elementary School

    He is a great American icon, yet he was full of contradictions and mystery.  So much so, that he has been referred to by Author Joseph Ellis as the “American Sphinx.”  Jefferson was a pioneer and inventor who became an expert in medicine, architecture, scientific farming, botany, archeology, paleontology and astronomy, yet he died nearly penniless.

    Thomas Jefferson served his country for 35 years.  He served in public office from the moment he graduated college.  He served in the Continental Congress in 1776.  He drafted the Declaration of Independence.  He served as a legislator and Governor of Virginia.  He served as the United States Minister to France, and served as the Secretary of State under President George Washington.  He lost his bid to be the second president of the United States and served as Vice President to John Adams.  He defeated Adams four years later to become the nation’s 3rd President and served two terms.  When Jefferson defeated Adams it was the first peaceful transfer of power from one party to the other in the nation’s history, which has now become a hallmark of our democratic system of government.

    This political life of Thomas Jefferson provides one of his greatest contradictions.  Thomas Jefferson achieved public greatness, yet he was an intensely private man who sought refuge at his mountaintop Virginia home, preferring the life of a farmer to the life of a politician.

    It is only right that we chose to name our newest school for Thomas Jefferson.  When you look at what we do here in this building, you should think of Thomas Jefferson as he was one of our nation’s earliest and strongest proponents of public education.  Through his vision, political skill and tireless effort, Jefferson founded the nation’s first public university in Virginia.

    Thomas Jefferson believed, and rightly so, that every person has the right to receive an education, and that educated citizens afford our only means of protecting our society and form of government from tyranny.  In 1786, he wrote to George Wythe:
    I think by far the most important bill in our whole code, is that for the diffusion of knowledge among the people. No other sure foundation can be devised for the preservation of freedom and happiness... The tax which will be paid for this purpose is not more than the thousandth part of what will be paid to kings, priests and nobles who will rise up among us if we leave the people in ignorance.

    Jefferson also believed that schools should be controlled by those who have the greatest stake in their success.  In his view, it would be a great mistake to nationalize our public schools; rather, he was a strong proponent of local control.  I think most of us would agree that we wish our state and national leaders would have listened more closely to Mr. Jefferson’s wisdom on this point, as he surely was right.

    Jefferson held strong views about how education should be conducted.  He believed that all children, male, female, rich and poor had the right to a free primary education, and that the wealthy should pay taxes to ensure the education of the poor.  With regard to elementary schools, Jefferson wrote the following in his report to the University of Virginia in 1818.  Listen closely to Jefferson to see just how well our mission at Union Public Schools fits his vision:

    The objects of... primary education [which] determine its character and limits [are]: To give to every citizen the information he needs for the transaction of his own business; to enable him to calculate for himself, and to express and preserve his ideas, his contracts and accounts in writing; to improve, by reading, his morals and faculties; to understand his duties to his neighbors and country, and to discharge with competence the functions confided to him by either; to know his rights; to exercise with order and justice those he retains, to choose with discretion the fiduciary of those he delegates; and to notice their conduct with diligence, with candor and judgment; and in general, to observe with intelligence and faithfulness all the social relations under which he shall be placed.

    With his words in mind, I believe Mr. Jefferson would be gratified to see what happens in this building every day.  Our children are learning the fundamental skills of reading, mathematics and science to equip them for a lifetime of learning and fulfilling employment.  Our children are learning about our nation, with both its bountiful privileges and duties of citizenship.  And you are reinforcing the attributes of good character our kids learn at home through our Character Counts program, emphasizing their duties as neighbors and what it means to live an ethical life.

    It would be simple to say that you are all fulfilling Thomas Jefferson’s legacy here each and every day.  But here again is another contradiction in Thomas Jefferson’s character.  By his very nature, Jefferson would reject the entire notion that his legacy should be respected or adhered to at all.  You see, Jefferson’s philosophy was that each generation must liberate itself from the dead and seek its own fate and future.

    Let there be no doubt that the teachers and staff at Thomas Jefferson Elementary are securing the fate and future of every student who graces these halls of this school, and those futures are looking bright.  That’s why this building is here; that’s why these children are here and that’s why you administrators and staff members are here.

    Thank you for all you do here in this building, for you will be blessing our community with your works for years to come.

    Jefferson Elementary School

    Board of Education President Scott McDaniel. His speech from the event - click here.

    Jefferson Elementary School

    Board of Education members Ed Payton, Heather McAdams, Ross Ford and Jeff Bennett.

    Jefferson Elementary School

    Student Council President Bishop Dewberry shakes the hand of Superintendent Dr. Cathy Burden

     

    Jefferson Elementary School

    Student Council President Bishop Dewberry and Principal Kim Rampey