In 1999, the Midwest Archeological Center undertook historical research and geophysical survey at
Monroe School, Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site, Topeka, Kansas. Monroe was a segregated
school within a historic African American community. It was the focus of a 1951 lawsuit against
the Topeka Board of Education to end public school segregation. The suit played an important role in the
Supreme Court's 1954 ruling that separate educational facilities are inherently unequal and violate the
14th Amendment to the United States Constitution, which guarantees all citizens equal protection of the
laws.
The school and grounds will see major renovation to become an interpretive and resource center and
to create office space for National Park Service administrators. Historic research identified at least 18
buildings that stood on the current school grounds between 1889 and 1926. There is no surface evidence
for these structures today. Geophysical survey used a fluxgate magnetometer, a resistivity meter, and
ground-penetrating radar to determine whether structural remnants are likely to exist, where they occur,
and (in some cases) make tentative identifications of the resource.
The survey confirmed the presence of many buried cultural features around Monroe School. Some
features correlate with remnants of historic structures, although most appear to represent smaller undocumented
cultural features. Anomaly concentrations and patterns conform with known property boundaries
and probably reflect variations in ownerse activities. The survey information can help guide development
planning and archeological investigations during renovation.