Gibsland-Coleman Complex

Gibsland-Coleman Complex, also known as Gibsland-Coleman High School, is a K-12 school in Gibsland, Louisiana. It is a part of the Bienville Parish School Board.

History

The original Gibsland campus became Coleman High School, and after desegregation in 1969 with the all-white Gibsland High School, was renamed the Gibsland-Coleman Complex.

One of the Gibsland High School principals, John Sherman Campbell (1897-1976), served from 1935 to 1938, when he accepted a position in Baton Rouge with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. A native of Ouachita Parish who was subsequently reared in Oak Grove in West Carroll Parish, Campbell wrote a master's thesis through Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge entitled, The Birds of Bienville Parish. Later Governor Jimmie Davis appointed him to the Louisiana Commission on Aging, in which capacity he attended the White House Conference on Aging in Washington, D. C., from January 9–12, 1961. Campbell, who held the bachelor's degree from Louisiana Tech University in Ruston, had been the principal at Bienville High School in Bienville from 1930 to 1935, when he came to Gibsland High School. An active Baptist layman, Campbell is honored by the establishment of the John S. Campbell Layman Lecture Series at Mid-America Baptist Theological Seminary in Memphis, Tennessee.[1]

Jesse N. Stone, the fourth president of the historically black Southern University System, was a Gibsland native, as was the Louisiana Tech University president F. Jay Taylor. Born in nearby Taylor, Louisiana, was the Louisiana Tech speech professor and long-time principal of Castor High School, E. R. Minchew.

References

  1. "Campbell, John Sherman". lahistory.org. Retrieved June 16, 2014.

Notes

Coordinates: 32°32′18″N 93°03′43″W / 32.5384°N 93.0620°W / 32.5384; -93.0620


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