The Shenandoah County School Board changed Stonewall Jackson High School to Mountain View High School and Ashby-Lee Elementary School to Honey Run Elementary School in Quicksburg, following a board vote in July 2020 and final approval in January 2021.
However, a petition was sent less than two years later to gauge the strength of feeling on regressing the schools to their original names.
FROM CONTROVERSY TO COMPASSION: DANIEL SNYDER'S JAW-DROPPING GIFT LEAVES NATION IN AWE
Vocal opposition came from community members and alumni, with more than 4,000 people signing the petition to switch the names back.
WATCH: RFK JR. WILL REVERSE 80 YEARS OF FARM POLICY
The topic was discussed at length by the six-member school board during a meeting last week.
Some new board members felt the decision to change names was rushed and did not consider the community's opinions.
Board Vice-Chair Dennis Barlow said those who were in favor of changing the names were outsiders who are "creepy," "elitist" and from "the dark side," he told NBC News.
JAMES CARVILLE'S CONTROVERSIAL CRITIQUE: IS WOKE CULTURE KILLING DEMOCRATIC SUPPORT?
He claims the school board's choice to change names in the first place was "undemocratic and unfair" stating that he believed General Stonewall Jackson to be a "gallant commander."
FROM CONTROVERSY TO COMPASSION: DANIEL SNYDER'S JAW-DROPPING GIFT LEAVES NATION IN AWE
"Most people who vote for elected officials then count on them to do the right thing on their behalf," said board member Cynthia Walsh who does not believe the names should be changed back.
INTRUDER SLIPS PAST TSA, BOARDS DELTA PLANE, IN EPIC SECURITY FAILURE
"We do have a representative democracy. We don't have a direct democracy," she added.
"Times have changed, the makeup of our schools has changed and I sincerely believe that revisiting the name change is not what's best for kids," Walsh said.
WATCH: ATF IS SET TO CRIMINALIZE 10 MILLION AMERICANS
"I suggested a compromise: adding a third" option — I did not agree to the name change but I do not think we should change it back — "and that's where we left it that night, but we didn't vote on it," Walsh said.
"In my opinion if you're doing it countywide, you might as well throw the students out because they don't care," said Kyle Gutshall who was elected to the board in this year is a recent high school graduate.
Other board, however, members were adamant that the decision has to first be what's right for the students.
OHIO MAN SENTENCED TO PRISON FOR THREATENING ARIZONA GOVERNOR KATIE HOBBS, DETAILS RELEASED
"No. 1 criteria: what is best for kids. The kids we'e going to teach today and the next 25 years," said board member Andrew Keller.