The Witness
Ralph McCartney was a son of Overtown — community activist, mentor, keeper of his neighborhood's memory, and the man for whom the McCartney Academy is named. This archive preserves his own words and the public record that honored him, so that the testimony grounding our work is kept, sourced, and unerasable. A people that keeps its own record can never be told it has none.
In His Own Words — the 1997 Oral History
Recorded for the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program under the title "Tell the Story." Short excerpts, used under Fair Use and attributed; the full interview is held by the program.
- The house that fed the neighborhood. The McCartney home doubled as a gathering place — kids nicknamed it "the McCartney Palace on McCartney Square." Of his parents he said: "Never did a hungry person cross that door and leave out that same way."
- The school as catalyst. In his Overtown, school was the center of pride: "To go to school is what was cool at that time." The school, he said, was the catalyst of the whole community.
- The Big Monster. When the expressways came, they "dissected and bisected the community" into "four different areas where there was once a whole community." His verdict was unsparing: "Those whom the Gods will destroy, they first make proud — so they gave us Booker Washington and they made us proud, and they took it away, and they destroyed us."
- Keeping children out of jail. After a life spent steering young people away from it, he took a post inside the county jail: "I must have worked in the jail for at least 7 or 8 months before I learned to stop crying every night."
- The charge he carried. "When you see something wrong, you've got to speak out against it — because if you don't, then you're perpetuating that wrong."
"The whole neighborhood was a family."Ralph McCartney, oral history, 1997
Excerpts © Samuel Proctor Oral History Program, University of Florida (2005); used under Fair Use with attribution.
The Proclamation — City of Opa-Locka, 1997
In 1997 the City of Opa-Locka — "a community of brotherhood and sisterhood" — proclaimed "Mr. Ralph McCartney Day," honoring his decades of community activism, his civil-rights work, and his labor to preserve Black history.
The Congressional Record — February 1, 1994
Rep. Carrie Meek (FL-17) rose in the United States House of Representatives to pay tribute to Ralph McCartney of Overtown — a man, she said, best known for his eloquence reciting great literature, but whose most outstanding contributions came "from working behind the scenes." She named three key elements of his legacy:
- The Edison Park I-95 overpass. Through his relentless effort it was built, so that — in her words — "young children no longer have to face the death-defying temptations of taking a short-cut across I-95 to get to school."
- The rebuilding of Booker T. Washington School. "The tireless work of Mr. McCartney, the late Dr. Johnny Jones, the school board, and the community led to the successful rebuilding of the school."
- The Department of Defense Race Relations Institute Through which many gained a deeper understanding of their role in making America and its institutions more just.
Asked how he wished to be remembered, he answered simply: "That I was a McCartney."Congressional Record, February 1, 1994
A Life — The Record
Why We Keep This
A school is the catalyst of a community. The highways took Overtown's. The family the highways displaced is building it back — and this archive is the ground truth beneath that work, kept honestly so it can never be erased again. The McCartney Academy is not named for a stranger. It is named for a man who, asked what he wanted, asked only to be remembered as what he was.
"A people that keeps its own record can never be told it has none."
The Record
This archive is maintained by E5 Enclave Incorporated — a Florida 501(c)(3) public charity (EIN 99-3822441; §509(a)(2)), Liberty City, Miami — as the legacy companion to the McCartney Academy.
Archival Sources & Verification
Sources are preserved with strict accuracy: the oral-history excerpts are © 2005 University of Florida (Samuel Proctor Oral History Program), used under Fair Use with attribution; the Congressional tribute is drawn from the public Congressional Record (February 1, 1994); the municipal proclamation is certified by the City of Opa-Locka, Florida (1997). Photographic elements are displayed as factual historical exhibits of the public record.
"Nil satis nisi optimum — nothing but the best is good enough."