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Saturday, September 21, 2024

Efforts of alumnus challenged inclusion, developed musicians, inspired thousands

Pictured  is the former Alcee Fortier High School in New Orleans, more recently  known as Lusher Charter School, that will be renamed in honor of GSU  alumnus Elijah Brimmer Jr. on Saturday. (Photo courtesy NOLA Public  Schools)

By T. Scott Boatright/University Communications

A Grambling State University graduate is set to be honored with “The Ultimate Honor Event” early on Saturday.

At noon Saturday, the late Elijah Brimmer Jr., a product of the  former Alcee Fortier High School in New Orleans, will have that school’s  building, which now houses Lusher Charter School, renamed in his honor.

The building is located at 7315 Willow St. in New Orleans.

Hired in 1978, Brimmer was among the second wave of Black  teachers to integrate Fortier High School, according to a petition that  sought to have the building named in Brimmer’s honor.  

That petition noted that Brimmer “worked to change the  systemic racism within Mardi Gras parades” that affected Black high  school bands at the time. 

Pictured is Elijah Brimmer Jr. during his days as a member of GSU World Famed Tiger Marching Band.

Fortier alumnus Norman Bell, in a comment on an online  petition asking for the school to be renamed in Brimmer’s honor,  remembered Brimmer fondly. 

“Mr. Brimmer was an inspiration to thousands. He inspired  not only band members, but the entire student body was challenged to  succeed because of the pride of inclusion he created. This honor would  be well deserved,” Bell wrote. 

After Brimmer’s death in 2019, Mayor LaToya Cantrell honored him with a post made on social media.

 “Mr. Brimmer  has played a pivotal role in the lives of our musicians and culture in  so many positive ways,” Cantrell wrote. “His years of service to the  uptown community will never be forgotten.”

Members of the Elijah Brimmer Jr. Committee, which worked  to have the building named after Brimmer, said that Brimmer worked  countless hours on and off the clock, dedicating his life to educating  his students in instrumental, concert, and marching band music. 

Brimmer was born June 24, 1945, in New Orleans and was  raised by his parents — Elijah Brimmer, Sr. and Agnes Landry Brimmer, in  the city’s Uptown Garden District.

A graduate of New Orleans’ Booker T. Washington High  School, Brimmer’s musical abilities earned him a four-year scholarship  to attend GSU, where he was a member of the World Famed Marching Tiger  Band.

After graduating from GSU with a bachelor’s degree in  music, Brimmer went back home to New Orleans, where he worked as a  student teacher and wrote sheet music for several schools in the  district.’

Brimmer worked at New Orleans’ George Washington Carver  High School before receiving a full-time position at Alcee Fortier High  School in 1978.

He is said to have faced many challenges dealing with  students from different wards and four different New Orleans housing  projects: Calliope, Melpomene, Magnolia and St. Thomas, especially when  gangs/drug sales territories began to form in the late 1980s and early  ’90s.

Pictured is the obituary photo for the late Elijah Brimmer Jr. (Photo courtesy of Rhodes Funeral Home).

Brimmer is said to have used music as a way of bridging  those gaps by focusing on a common goal of students wanting to be part  of the best marching band in uptown New Orleans.

His above and beyond approach was evident when he provided  transportation for students to and from band practice and after  football and basketball games as well as carnival parades by picking  them up and dropping them off at public bus stops. 

He headed the Fortier Band Summer Camp for 20 years, with  community members calling him a father to the fatherless, a mentor, a  role model, advocate, visionary and leader not only in the school system  but also as a pillar in the community.

James Henderson was in the drum corps in GSU’s World Famed  Tiger Marching Band when he first met Brimmer, who was a flutist in the  band. Henderson later worked often with Brimmer when Henderson was  Chief Financial Officer for the New Orleans Public Schools System from  1975-97.

“It’s an outstanding and well-deserved honor,” Henderson  said of the building being renamed in Brimmer’s honor. “He built one of  the best music programs at Fortier — he put the school on the map. “That  school took a lot of pride in that band he built.”

Brimmer’s band at Fortier became one of the premiere bands  during carnival season in New Orleans, serving as one of the lead-off  bands for some one of the city’s top Mardi Gras parades like Bachhaus  and the Krewe of Freret.

“The Krewe of Freret (parade) started Uptown on the street  in front of Fortier High School,” Henderson said. “They would march out  of their school with pride like you wouldn’t believe. They would march  straight out of the school into the formation of the parade. 

“Just to see them in that parade was something to see — something special, just like he was.”

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 This entry was posted in Uncategorized on September 2, 2022 by Thomas Boatright.

Original source can be found here.

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