Residents of California school district want racially charged name changed…and they ain’t whistling ‘Dixie’

Residents of the Marin County area where the Dixie School District lies say the name evokes the Confederacy, but others claim the name has a specific historical origin

Dixie
San Rafael, Calif., residents are caught in a debate on whether or not the name of the Dixie School District is racist. (KGO-TV)

Residents of San Rafael, a community in Northern California, are battling over the name of its school district – the Dixie School District – with opponents to the name saying it conjures up thoughts of the Confederacy and slavery, the Los Angeles Times is reporting.

The school board in the community of 59,000 north of San Francisco is slated to vote at a meeting today to consider more than a dozen alternative names for the district, which is majority white. The issue has bubbled up at a time when several elected officials have admitted to donning blackface in the past and three clothing companies have issued apologies for selling items that appear to show blackface, which was intended to demean Black Americans in the slavery and Jim Crow eras.

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“We somehow in our privileged bubble think we don’t have to move into the 21st century,” longtime Marin County resident Noah Griffin told the Times about the controversy. “The Confederacy doesn’t need an outpost in Marin County.”

But We Are Dixie, a group of people who want the name to stay – who declined to allow the Times to publish their identities – say the name has nothing to do with slavery, the Civil War or the South.

It came from Mary Dixie, a Native American woman connected to James Miller, founder of the school district, according to the website wearedixie.org. The website explains that Mary Dixie, a Miwok born in 1832, married fellow Miwok John Dixie near a region founded by James Miller’s inlaws – thus, the connection.

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“It is proven that the Dixie Miwok name existed long before the confederacy,” according to the site.

We Are Dixie members said in a statement published by the Times that a vote was the best way to navigate through the controversy.

“The school board of just five people should not allow a group of social justice thugs to steamroll over the community in an attempt to forcefully make a 150-year-old district change the name without public input,” the group wrote. “We feel … it should be put to rest by a local democratic vote, which includes the voice of the generations of local families that have worked to build the award-winning school district.”

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