HOUSTON – They gathered in a small park across from Jack Yates High School, huddling in a gray drizzle. Reminders of George Floyd, Class of 1993, stood all around: in the street mural that featured his football jersey number of 88, in the painting of his face that looked down from a chimney.
And now, in their move to name this park after him.
"George Floyd was also a Jack Yates Lion, which really, really brought this home," City Council Member Carolyn Evans-Shabazz, herself a Yates alumnus, told the small crowd.
"And so I truly hope that things will change, because we don't want to have to keep lifting people up because they have died."
In the year since Floyd was killed by a Minneapolis police officer, his alma mater has worked to honor his legacy.
Already celebrated as a star football player who helped lead his team to the 1992 state championships, Floyd has become the face of racial justice to his one-time peers and the next generation of students at Jack Yates. The community came together swiftly in the days after his death, and hundreds of alumni gathered at Jack Yates for a candlelight vigil.

The school is named for a freed slave who became a prominent pastor and community leader, and opened in 1926 as Houston's second school for children of color. Today it's attended by 800 students, most of them still Black.
"We're a very, very tight-knit school," said Jeffrey Boney, president of the Yates alumni association. He graduated two years ahead of Floyd.