Tinner Hill

Tinner Hill is an historic area of Falls Church, Virginia, named after Charles and Mary Tinner, an African-American couple who bought land there in the late 19th century. Family members quarried stone used in many buildings nearby.[1][2] Between 1910 and 1918, their descendant Joseph Tinner and Edwin Bancroft Henderson fought for civil rights and helped found the first rural branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

NAACP at Tinner Hill

In 1915, Joseph Tinner and Dr. Edwin B. Henderson (already a NAACP member in Washington D.C. and who had spent summers with his grandmother in this area before moving there with his wife in 1910) organized the Colored Citizens Protective League (CCPL). This responded to a new Falls Church town ordinance mandating residential racial segregation, as allowed pursuant to legislation passed by the Virginia General Assembly in 1912. Falls Church wanted to restrict African-Americans to the area south of Fairfax Street, Liberty and Douglass Avenues, which according to a special survey had 53 colored and 8 white residents, while 1,212 white and 113 colored residents lived in the rest of the town.[3] The CCPL filed a lawsuit to block enforcement, and were successful in the Supreme Court of Virginia. However, educational segregation persisted, and Henderson later recalled that Falls Church soon ceded the area to Fairfax County (according to him to eliminate them as potential Republican voters).[4] In 1917 the U.S. Supreme Court decided Buchanan vs. Worley, blocking similar state residential segregation laws.

In addition to engaging in a letter writing campaign against the ordinance, Dr. Henderson requested a charter for a local branch of the NAACP, although the first six branches since the NAACP's founding in 1909 were all in cities. The NAACP first allowed the CCPL to operate a standing committee. In 1918, the NAACP granted the CCPL a charter which allowed it to form the Falls Church and Vicinity NAACP. The first rural branch had about 40 members and 8 officers, including Tinner as the first president, and Henderson as secretary. In 1944 the NAACP issued the branch a new charter as the "Fairfax County Branch."[5]

Over the next decades the group spearheaded civil rights activities that established precedents for the nation: fighting for public utilities, a larger elementary school, and an effective postal service.

Memorials

Tinner Hill now has two memorial sites, plus the Henderson home about a quarter mile away (ironically on the far side of the original segregation line). A park with explanatory signage, a picnic areas and a memorial zig zag river sculpture adjoins the former Tinner residence, and was dedicated by the Northern Virginia Regional Parks Commission and former delegate James Scott.

Across Washington Avenue at its intersection with Tinner Hill Road (near the intersection with Hillside Avenue), stands a stone arch erected by the Tinner Hill Heritage Foundation in 1999, with additional signagehonoring Joseph Tinner and E.B. Henderson. The fifteen-foot monument of pink granite (trondhjemite) also honors the men and women of Tinner Hill and the NAACP's first rural branch. The arch symbolizes the strength magnified when two pillars join through a keystone, and was not damaged by the construction of a luxury apartment building immediately behind it, although one of the plaques nearby is missing. The pillars symbolize Joseph Tinner and E.B. Henderson, and the keystone their battle for civil rights. The stone used in the arch was retrieved from demolished buildings built with granite that Tinner quarried, cut and masoned in Falls Church prior to 1922. The monument also pays homage to Joseph Tinner's greatest stonework, a large stand-alone arch that once stood about two miles away at Seven Corners. That arch was demolished decades ago during construction of a car dealership. Local high school art teacher John Ballou drew the concept design; with the assistance of architect Marc Coupard and Structural Engineer Guy Razzi. The monument was designed in a manner so that it can not be disassembled without destruction; the rock is now irreplaceable, as all remaining local trondhjemite is too friable to use in a stand-alone arch. The highly specialized stone masonry for the monument was crafted by Roy Morgan of Washington, D.C. and James Ware of Virginia. Piedmont Blues guitarist/singer John Jackson headlined the original dedication ceremony. A thirty-minute film "The Making of a Monument" by Dave Eckert shows how the arch was made. Another short film "Tinner Hill" by Bob Burnett provides a more in-depth story about the history and people of Tinner Hill.

Tinner Blues Festival

Since 1993, the annual Tinner Blues Festival takes place on the second Saturday of June several blocks away in Cherry Hill Park in what is now the City of Falls Church. Many national and area blues musicians play at the event, which also honors Jackson's memory.

References

  1. Falls Church Historic Trail: A guide and map
  2. http://www.aahistoricsitesva.org/items/show/439
  3. "Falls Church and Segregation in the 20th Century", clippings file, Arlington library.
  4. H.C. Burchard Jr. "Old Warrior Against Segregation Leaving Field at 82", Washington Star (undated in Arlingtonlibrary clippings file, possibly November 1965)
  5. clippings file

African American Heritage site "The Making of a Monument" video by Dave Eckert

External links

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