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Doswell E. Brooks was the
Supervisor of Black schools for 34 years in Prince George’s County.
He was born in Virginia but
raised in Baltimore, Maryland. He attended Hampton Institute to become a
teacher. World War I took him to France. After the war, he came to
Prince George’s County to supervise 43 schools. A year later, he helped
to start the first high school for Black students in Upper Marlboro.
Doswell
Brooks helped to buy the first school bus for Black students and worked
hard to see that students had new books.

He worked with parents to buy a
building for their Parent/Teacher Association (PTA). Here, parents met
countywide. He also expressed interest in the town where he lived; and,
in 1955, he became Mayor of Fairmount Heights. In 1956, Doswell Brooks
was appointed as the first Black member of the Prince George’s County
Board of Education.
Doswell E. Brooks served as Supervisor
of Colored Schools for Prince George's County beginning in 1922, and, in
1956, became the first African American member of the Board of
Education. He also served on the Fairmount Heights town council and was
Mayor from 1955 until shortly before his death in 1968. He is buried at
the Baltimore National Cemetery in Baltimore City, Maryland (Brooks,
Doswell, b. 05/15/1894, d. 02/19/1968, Plot: L 0 2529, bur. 02/23/1968).
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