The question came up at Wednesday's (1/25) Board Business Meeting about Morrisville School District's School Tax millage relative to other Bucks County School Districts. The table below, from the Bucks County website, provides a summary. The 2nd column from the right is the 2011-12 School District millage. I couldn't quite get the column headers to work out. The rightmost column (with no header) is the total millage (Boro/Twp. + School District + County). School tax millage-wise, Morrisville's 177.3 mills is not the highest in Bucks. Bristol Twp. (188.3147 mills) has that distinction. Bristol Boro (154), Neshaminy (152), and Pennsbury (150.3) aren't that far behind us.
Boro/Twp.
School Dist.
2011 Boro/Twp.
Millage
2011-12 School Dist. Millage
1
Bedminster Twp
Pennridge SD
7.50000
123.01690
152.45901
2
Bensalem Twp
Bensalem SD
19.50000
141.42750
182.86961
3
Bridgeton Twp
Palisades SD
6.00000
110.34000
138.28211
4
Bristol Boro
Bristol Boro SD
49.89000
154.00000
225.83211
5
Bristol Twp
Bristol Twp SD
23.98750
188.31470
234.24431
6
Buckingham Twp
Central Bucks SD
5.50000
120.80000
148.24211
7
Chalfont Boro
Central Bucks SD
13.00000
120.80000
155.74211
8
Doylestown Boro
Central Bucks SD
11.22500
120.80000
153.96711
9
Doylestown Twp
Central Bucks SD
10.25000
120.80000
152.99211
10
Dublin Boro
Pennridge SD
10.00000
123.01690
154.95901
11
Durham Twp
Palisades SD
4.00000
110.34000
136.28211
12
E Rockhill Twp
Pennridge SD
7.48500
123.01690
152.44401
13
Falls Twp
Pennsbury SD
7.22000
150.30000
179.46211
14
Haycock Twp.
Quakertown SD
5.00000
140.25000
167.19211
15
Hilltown Twp
Pennridge SD
8.75000
123.01690
153.70901
16
Hulmeville Boro
Neshaminy SD
9.97000
152.00000
183.91211
17
Ivyland Boro
Centennial SD
13.50000
113.58000
149.02211
18
Langhorne Boro
Neshaminy SD
12.19625
152.00000
186.13836
19
Langhorne Manor Boro
Neshaminy SD
9.87500
152.00000
183.81711
20
Lower Makefield Twp
Pennsbury SD
15.12000
150.30000
187.36211
21
Lower South Twp
Neshaminy SD
14.08000
152.00000
188.02211
22
Middletown Twp
Neshaminy SD
17.57000
152.00000
191.51211
23
Milford Twp
Quakertown SD
2.00000
140.25000
164.19211
24
Morrisville Boro
Morris Boro SD
40.93000
177.30000
240.17211
25
New Britain Boro
Central Bucks SD
21.87500
120.80000
164.61711
26
New Britain Twp
Central Bucks SD
12.06250
120.80000
154.80461
27
New Hope Boro
NH/Solebury SD
11.72500
83.29910
116.96621
28
Newtown Boro
Council Rock SD
6.00000
110.68000
138.62211
29
Newtown Twp
Council Rock SD
2.50000
110.68000
135.12211
30
Nockamixon Twp
Palisades SD
6.00000
110.34000
138.28211
31
Northampton Twp
Council Rock SD
11.14250
110.68000
143.76461
32
Penndel Boro
Neshaminy SD
12.50000
152.00000
186.44211
33
Perkasie Boro
Pennridge SD
5.75000
123.01690
150.70901
34
Plumstead Twp
Central Bucks SD
13.25000
120.80000
155.99211
35
Quakertown Boro
Quakertown SD
1.62500
140.25000
163.81711
36
Richland Twp
Quakertown SD
9.50000
140.25000
171.69211
37
Richlandtown Boro
Quakertown SD
1.25000
140.25000
163.44211
38
Riegelsville Boro
Easton Area
11.25000
161.21100
193.34608
39
Sellersville Boro
Pennridge SD
16.00000
123.01690
160.95901
40
Silverdale Boro
Pennridge SD
2.75000
123.01690
147.70901
41
Solebury Twp
NH/Solebury SD
19.06000
83.29910
124.30121
42
Springfield Twp
Palisades SD
3.50000
110.34000
135.78211
43
Telford Boro
Montg Cty @ 100%
4.63000
27.19000
53.76211
44
Tinicum Twp
Palisades SD
8.50000
110.34000
140.78211
45
Trumbauersville Boro
Quakertown SD
2.50000
140.25000
164.69211
46
Tullytown Boro
Pennsbury SD
11.50000
150.30000
183.74211
47
Upper Makefield Twp
Council Rock SD
13.35250
110.68000
145.97461
48
Upper South Twp
Centennial SD
21.88000
113.58000
157.40211
49
Warminster Twp
Centennial SD
17.07000
113.58000
152.59211
50
Warrington Twp
Central Bucks SD
11.55000
120.80000
154.29211
51
Warwick Twp
Central Bucks SD
15.25000
120.80000
157.99211
52
West Rockhill Twp
Pennridge SD
5.25000
123.01690
150.20901
53
Wrightstown Twp
Council Rock SD
6.58000
110.68000
139.20211
54
Yardley Boro
Pennsbury SD
16.74000
150.30000
188.98211
Please Note: Tax millage rates indicated are provided by local taxing authorities.
You MUST verify accuracy of this tax information and do NOT rely upon this report.
Board of Assessment Appeals Office County Administration Building
55 E. Court Street
Doylestown, PA 18901
Phone: 215-348-6219
Fax: 215-348-6225
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Martin Luther King Jr. spoke at Glenville High School on April 26, 1967. This is a transcript of that speech.
King spoke at three East Side schools (Glenville, Addison Junior High, and East Tech) and at the Cleveland Job Corps Center for Women that day. The Plain Dealer's Roldo Bartimole reported, "King, president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, was invited to Cleveland by the United Pastors Association, a group of Negro ministers formed after last summer's Hough riots. King was asked to investigate Cleveland's racial problems, and suggest possible solutions."
How very delighted I am to be here this morning and to have the great privilege and opportunity of sharing with you and being with you here in the city of Cleveland. I never feel like a stranger when I come to Cleveland because I have so many dear friends here in the ministry and in the community and so I always look forward to coming to Cleveland with great and eager anticipation. I certainly want to thank the administration for the opportunity and I want to thank Miss Williams for those very kind words of introduction.
Hear the speech (21:02)
Full audio recording of Martin Luther King Jr.'s Glenville High School speech, 1967.
As she was introducing me, I felt something like the old maid who had never been married. And one day she went to work and the lady for whom she worked said, "Ann, I hear you're getting married."
She said, "No, I'm not getting married, but thank God for the rumor."
As I listened to Miss Williams, I said to myself, "All of these wonderful things that she said about me can't be true, but thank God for the rumor."
Now, I’m sure each of you is aware of the problems that we confront in our nation, the problems that we confront in the world, the problem that we as a people confront in all of our communities all over the United States of America.
It was Victor Hugo who said on one occasion that there is nothing more powerful in all the world than an idea whose time has come. And I want to assure you today that the idea whose time has come in our day and our generation is the idea of freedom and human dignity. Wherever people are assembled today, whether they are in Johannesburg, South Africa; Nairobi, Kenya; or whether they are in Jackson, Mississippi; Atlanta, Georgia; New York City or Cleveland, Ohio, the cry is always the same: We want to be free.
Footnote
Desegregation -- legal action to end the separation of the races -- was an issue through the 1960s. It hit home in Cleveland six years after King's speech, with the filing ofReed v. Rhodes, which led to the desegregation of the city's school system.
And I would like to suggest some of the thing things that you must do and some of the things that all of us must do in order to be truly free. Now the first thing that we must do is to develop within ourselves a deep sense of somebodiness. Don’t let anybody make you feel that you are nobody. Because the minute one feels that way, he is incapable of rising to his full maturity as a person. You know a lot of people have segregated minds and one of the first things that the Negro must do is to desegregate his mind.
Footnote
From 1924 to 1947, Booker T. Washington was the only high school for African-Americans in Atlanta. King attended in 1942-43, leaving early to enter Morehouse College. See atimeline of his life.
I remember when I was growing up in Atlanta, Georgia, I had to go to high school on the other side of town. At that time it was the only high school for Negroes in the whole city of Atlanta, the Booker T. Washington High School. When I was a student there we had 7,000 students in that one school. I guess that’s the reason I can’t read too well now, because the teacher had to spend all the time getting the class in order and disciplining the class because it was so overcrowded, but anyway we had to pass by all of these schools, white schools, to get to the Booker Washington High School. And I had to ride the bus from home every morning to the other side of town. And fortunately I had parents who taught me from the very beginning that I was somebody, and that I should never feel inferior. They taught all of us that, that we should feel that we are as good as any other children. And I remember day after day getting on that bus -- it was a segregated bus. Negroes had to sit in the back. And often we had to stand over empty seats because the seats up at the front were reserved for whites only.
And I started getting on that bus going across town and every time I got on the bus, even though I found myself having to take my body back to the back of the bus, I always left my mind on the front seat. And I said to myself one of these days, I’m going to put my body up there where my mind is.
Footnote
King combined two concepts that are familiar slogans of the era and beyond. "Black is beautiful," a refutation of the stereotype of inferiority, spread worldwide. This PBS reportidentifies Marcus Garvey as the first popularizer. "I Am Somebody," from a 1950s poem by an African-American minister, is perhaps best remembered from the Rev. Jesse Jackson's call-and-response with a group of children on "Sesame Street." (YouTube video)
Now this is all I’m saying this morning that we must feel that we count. That we belong. That we are persons. That we are children of the living God. And it means that we go down in our soul and find that somebodiness and we must never again be ashamed of ourselves. We must never be ashamed of our heritage. We must not be ashamed of the color of our skin. Black is as beautiful as any color and we must believe it.
And so every black person in this country must rise up and say I’m somebody; I have a rich proud and noble history, however painful and exploited it has been. I am black, but I am black and beautiful.
Footnote
The poet is William Cowper, in "The Negro's Complaint," 1788. That and more of his anti-slavery poems are available online.
And so we must be able to cry out with the eloquent poet: “Fleecy locks and black complexion cannot forfeit nature’s claim, Skin may differ but affection dwells in black and white the same. If I were so tall as to reach the pole or to grasp the ocean at a span, I must be measured by my soul, the mind is the standard of the man.” And we must believe this firmly and live by it.
Now the second thing I want to suggest is this:
That we must make full and constructive use of the freedom we already possess. We must not wait for the day of full emancipation before we set out to achieve certain basic developments in our lives. Now I know the problems here. And I’m not unmindful of the fact that through segregation and discrimination many of us have been scarred.
Footnote
"Negro" was the term generally preferred by the civil rights movement in the 1960s. For a discussion of "Negro," "black," "African-American" and other terms, read a 2010 Los Angeles Times column about the inclusion of "Negro" on census forms.
Many have lost motivation. But I think it is safe to say that there is a host of young people in the Negro community who can brilliantly apply themselves and thereby make full and constructive use of the freedom we already possess. This means we must set out to achieve excellence in our various fields of endeavor. This means that we’ve got to study hard, we’ve got to stay in school. Again, I know the social problems that cause many Negroes to drop out of school but I urge you today to develop that rugged determination: Stay in school, stick with to the end. It may be that you will have to work harder than other people but don’t mind that. Go on and do it anyhow.
Footnote
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "The Ladder of Saint Augustine," 1858, available online. Also note that the reference to doors opening -- as well as some other themes from this speech -- were among the elements King reworked in many of his speeches of the era. The Seattle Times has posted one such example, from an October 1967 speech in Philadelphia.
It was Longfellow who said, “The heights of great men reached and kept were not attained by sudden flight, but they while their companions slept were toiling upward in the night.” And I urge you today to realize that doors of opportunities are opening now that were not open to our mothers and our fathers. And the great challenge facing each of you today is to be ready to enter these doors as they open.
Footnote
Actually, Emerson wrote something in his journal that was much less euphonious. Anthologists after his death revised the words, and they have been honed by a kind of literary game of telephone into the version King noted. Read a bit more about the quote's history.
Ralph Waldo Emerson said on one occasion that if a man can write a better book, or preach a better sermon or make a better mousetrap than his neighbor, even if he builds his house in the woods the world will make a beaten path to his door.
That hasn’t always been true but it will be increasingly true.
So, set out to do a good job and do that job so well that the living, the dead, or the unborn couldn’t do it any better. And let me say that we’ve got to prepare now to compete with people. Many of our parents have been so scarred by years of denial and neglect that they cannot face the same challenges that we face. But I say to you that you have the opportunity to assert certain things and get ready to compete with people. Don’t set out merely to do a good Negro job. If you’re setting out one day to be a good Negro doctor or a good Negro lawyer or a good Negro schoolteacher or a good Negro preacher or a good Negro skilled laborer or a good Negro barber or beautician, you have already flunked your matriculation exam for entrance into the university of integration.
This is what Douglas Malloch meant when he said, "If you can't be a pine on the top of the hill, be a scrub in the valley -- but be the best little scrub on the side of the rill. Be a bush, if you can't be a tree. If you can't be a highway, just be a trail. If you can't be the sun, be a star. It isn't by size that you win or you fail. Be the best of whatever you are!"
Now the final thing I want to say is this: That if we are going to achieve freedom we’ve got to engage in action programs to make that freedom possible. Let nobody fool you about this. Freedom is never voluntarily given to the oppressed by the oppressor. It must be demanded. And I say to you this morning that this will be necessary all over the United States of America. But as I say this let me give a warning signal that we must work passionately and unrelentingly for first-class citizenship but we must never use second-class methods to gain it. We’ve got to get smart. We’ve got to organize. We’ve got to organize so effectively and so well and engage in such powerful, creative protest that there will not be a power in the world that can stop us and that can afford to ignore us.
Our power does not lie in Molotov cocktails. Our power does not lie in bricks and stones. Our power does not lie in bottles.
Our power lies in our ability to unite around concrete programs. Our power lies in our ability to say nonviolently that we aren’t gonna take it any longer. You see the chief problem with a riot is that it can always be halted by a superior force. But I know another weapon that the National Guard can’t stop.
Footnote
Bull Connor, Commissioner of Public Safety in Birmingham, Ala., was one of the most notorious Southern advocates of harsh tactics to defeat the civil rights movement. He was known for unleashing snarling, snapping dogs on protesters and forcing them off the streets with powerful streams from fire hoses. There's a 10-minute documentary with clips of Connor ("You've got to keep the black and the white separate") on YouTube.
They tried to stop it in Mississippi, they tried to stop it in Alabama but we had a power that Bull Connor’s fire hoses couldn’t put out. It was a fire within. And I say that we can have that same kind of fire all over the United States of America. And we can transform dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows through this method. And so I come to you today and urge you to work in the civil rights movement, to join the civil rights organizations, to give of your time and your activity, when you have spare time, in community action.
One of the things that we need in every city is political power. Enough of our parents don’t register and vote. Each of you should serve as a committee of one to work with your parents if they have not registered to vote and other people in the community.
Footnote
Cleveland voters did elect Carl Stokes as mayor later in 1967.
Cleveland, Ohio, is a city that can be the first city of major size in the United States to have a black mayor and you should participate in making that a possibility. This is an opportunity for you.
And so there are things that all of us can do and I urge you to do it with zeal and with vigor. And let me say to you, my friends, that in spite of the difficult days ahead, the so-called white backlash — which is nothing but a new name for an old phenomenon — I’m still convinced that we’re going to achieve freedom right here in America. And I believe this because however much America has strayed away from the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, the goal of America is freedom. Abused and scorned as we may be, our destiny is tied up with the destiny of America.
Before the Pilgrim fathers landed at Plymouth, we were here.
Before Jefferson etched across the pages of history the majestic words of the Declaration of Independence, we were here.
Before the beautiful words of the Star-Spangled Banner were written, we were here.
And for more than two centuries, our forebears labored here without wages. They made cotton king, and they built the homes of their masters in the midst of the most humiliating and oppressive conditions.
And yet out of a bottomless vitality they continued to grow and develop, and I say to you this morning that if the inexpressible cruelties of slavery couldn’t stop us, the opposition that we now face will surely fail.
We are going to win our freedom because both the sacred heritage of our nation and the eternal will of the Almighty God are embodied in our echoing demands.
And so I say, let us keep moving, let us move on toward the goal of brotherhood, toward the goal of personal fulfillment, toward the goal of a society undergirded by justice.
And I close by quoting a beautiful little poem from the pen of Langston Hughes, where he has a mother, talking to a son. With ungrammatical profundity that mother says, "Well, son, I'll tell you: Life for me ain't been no crystal stair. It's had tacks in it, boards torn up, and places with no carpet on the floor -- bare. But all the time I'se been a-climbin' on, and reachin' landin's, and turnin' corners, and sometimes goin' in the dark where there ain't been no light. So boy, don't you turn back. Don't you set down on the steps 'cause you finds it's kinder hard. For I'se still goin', boy, I'se still climbin', and life for me ain't been no crystal stair."
Well, life for none of us has been a crystal stair, but we must keep moving. We must keep going. And so, if you can't fly, run. If you can't run, walk. If you can't walk, crawl. But by all means, keep moving.