Deirdre Guyton, Bluefield State College's director of alumni affairs, holds up a photo of the school's football team from 1927 to 1928, when it was the best black college team.
Deirdre Guyton, Bluefield State College’s director of alumni affairs, holds up a photo of the school’s football team from 1927 to 1928, when it was the best black college team.

It opened in the late 19th century as the Bluefield Colored Institute, created to educate the children of black coal miners in segregated West Virginia. Although it still receives the federal funding that comes with its designation as a historically black institution, today Bluefield State College is 90 percent white. The road that separates those realities is as rocky as any story of racial transition in post-World War II America.

We went to the campus of Bluefield State to see what campus life was like at this unusual college.

The very first student we met, Antonio Bolden, or Tony as he introduced himself, looked like any other student you might see at a historically black college or university (HBCU). He’s a laid-back 19-year-old, stocky with shoulder-length dreadlocks and green eyes. But at Bluefield State, Tony is an outlier for several reasons. He’s a teenager; the average age of his classmates is 27. He started college right after high school; many of his classmates are working full-time jobs, raising children, or both. And of course, he’s black, whereas the student body is only historically so.

Antonio Bolden, a 19-year-old student and baseball player, is a rarity at Bluefield State: He started college right after high school and isn’t from the region.

Tony came to Bluefield State to play baseball, hoping to win the starting spot on third base. But he was surprised by what he found when he got to campus. “My first thought was: There are a lot of white people,” he said.

“Where all the black people at?”

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