Groups battle over renaming Brea elementary school possibly linked to racist past
The renaming of William E. Fanning Elementary School has been the cause of a great divide among local residents for the last year and a half.
Those who support the name change claim William E. Fanning, a former Brea-Olinda School District superintendent, had ties to the local Ku Klux Klan chapter in the 1920s. But those who oppose the renaming believe there is insufficient evidence to support the move.
Dozens from both sides of the issue showed up for Mondayâs school board meeting. The board was originally expected to vote at the meeting, but that was rescheduled for Jan. 28.
Prior to the meeting, about 40 people rallied in the courtyard of the civic center in support of renaming.
Protesters held signs that read, âTime to take actionâ and âWe will change it.â Speakers armed with megaphones made their cases at a lectern.
âI cannot support a school with the name of Fanning,â said Fred Calhoun, president of the Orange County arm of the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People. âWe have to get rid of that name. We will take any action we have to.â
Carlota Serna has two children in the Brea school system.
âI canât do nothing knowing that a school in our district bears a name of a member of the KKK,â Serna said.
Mike Rodriguez, an original member of the group supporting the renaming, said the information about Fanningâs potentially divisive past arose from a 2011 OC Weekly article by Gustavo Arellano, who now writes for the Los Angeles Times. Arellano wrote a series of articles exposing possible members of the KKK in Orange County using a list â which some believe holds the names of former klan members â at the Anaheim Heritage Center as a reference. Fanningâs name is on the list.
The renaming campaign was put into motion after a series of national events led members like Rodriguez to fear rising white nationalism. In particular, the death of Heather Heyer on Aug. 12, 2017 in Charlottesville, Va., spurred the local movement.
The list became the primary evidence for supporters of renaming the school.
But William Fanning, the grandson of the elder Fanning, questions the validity of the list because of its unknown origins.
While Arellano acknowledged the lack of provenance in his original series, he has contended that the listâs authenticity was supported because it was used by former Orange County District Attorney Alexander Nelson to push the KKK out of the county and another copy is on file at the Library of Congress.
Fanningâs skepticism of the list received support in a 2017 report from Linda Shay, museum curator of the Brea Historical Society, which was prepared for the school district. It took umbrage with the claim that Fanning was in the KKK.
âWe do not know who created the list or when it was created or what it represents,â the report says.
The researchers who compiled the report âfound no credible or substantiated evidence to support the claim that William E. Fanning was a racist.â
Rodriguez remains unswayed.
âThat report is very biased, and very myopic, and really is not a critical examination of William Fanning and his involvement with the KKK,â Rodriguez said.
In an article written last year, Gabriel San RomĂĄn of the OC Weekly defended the veracity of the list and criticized Shayâs report.
William Fanning said heâs been interviewing family members and going over his grandfatherâs documents. He said he hasnât uncovered anything that hints at racism.
âThe challenge here for us is we are being asked to prove a negative â to demonstrate proof that he wasnât in the KKK,â Fanning said. âPeople donât normally leave things in their life papers of what they didnât do.â
Twitter:@benbrazilpilot
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