The St. Paul school board voted 6-1 Tuesday night to strip the name of a slave-owning U.S. president from one of its schools, overriding the vocal objections of some of the school's alumni.
Linwood Monroe Arts Plus, a dual-campus school that decades ago was home to the former Monroe High, named in honor of President James Monroe, now will be known as Global Arts Plus.
Red-clad proponents pushed for the change to better reflect the school's arts-infused focus and diversity. Students come from all over St. Paul and all over the world, said Saray Garnett-Hochuli, co-chairwoman of the school's parent-teacher organization.
Linwood Monroe's upper grades now are housed at the former Monroe High, and that school's active alumni — the last class graduated in 1977 — brought a smattering of green, emblematic of the school's traditional "Green Wave" nickname and school color, to the boardroom to fight the change.
In the end, Board Member John Brodrick was siding with opponents. Erasing the name of a U.S. president is new to Twin Cities name-changing conversations, and Brodrick, reflecting aloud, described it as a significant and important moment that should not be rushed.
"Would you agree?" he said, to applause from name-change critics.
Board Member Steve Marchese, however, said it was time to think of the young people carving out a new future.
"We respect our history, but we are not bound to it," he said.