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Rosenwald Schools Historical Markers

Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears Roebuck established a foundation that funded 4,977 schools for African Americans throughout the south from 1912 to 1932.
 
Macedonia Rosenwald School Marker image, Touch for more information
By Mark Hilton, October 25, 2023
Macedonia Rosenwald School Marker
101 Mississippi, Panola County, Batesville — Macedonia Rosenwald School
Constructed to educate black children during the Jim Crow era, the Macedonia Rosenwald School was the educational and cultural center of the community. The school was constructed in 1923-24 by the Webb brothers, who were local builders, and . . . Map (db m235180) HM
102 Mississippi, Pike County, Magnolia — Sherman Line Rosenwald School
The Sherman Line Rosenwald School was established in 1928 for the education of black youth in the Sherman community from Pike and Amite counties. Partial funding for the school was provided by the Julius Rosenwald Fund, while the land was . . . Map (db m201231) HM
103 Mississippi, Walthall County, Tylertown — Walthall County Training School
The Walthall County Training School had its beginning in the 1870s when Isaac Ginn began to teach the local African American children to read and write in a small, one room, split-log cabin structure. Using Rosenwald Foundation funds this structure . . . Map (db m115535) HM
104 Mississippi, Warren County, Vicksburg — Kings School
In 1920-21, the Sandy Bottom School (the original name for Kings School) was built with funding assistance from the Rosenwald Foundation, a philanthropic organization dedicated to building schools for African American students in the rural . . . Map (db m157542) HM
105 North Carolina, Camden County, Camden — McBride Colored SchoolCirca 1926 — An Original Rosenwald School —
This location is the site of the original "McBride Colored School". The school was erected in 1926 during the era of segregation in the rural South for the education of African American children grades 1-12. Julius Rosenwald and Booker T. . . . Map (db m211237) HM
106 North Carolina, Chowan County, Edenton — A-89 — Rosenwald Schools
Julius Rosenwald and Booker T. Washington established fund in 1912 to provide grants to African American communities to improve education. In N.C. the fund assisted with 817 projects in 93 counties. The first one was Warren Grove School, a . . . Map (db m225206) HM
107 North Carolina, Forsyth County, Winston-Salem — (Former) Atkins High School
Named for prominent local African-American education pioneer, Dr. Simon Green Atkins, Atkins High School was designed by Harold Macklin in the Classical Revival style and constructed 1930-1931. Atkins was the first school in Winston-Salem built as a . . . Map (db m83275) HM
108 North Carolina, Gates County, Gatesville — Reid's Grove School
Still on its original site, the Reid's Grove School educated African American students in the Gatesville area. Completed on November 5, 1927 and closed in 1951, it was one of seven schools in Gates County (and one of over 800 in North Carolina) . . . Map (db m79796) HM
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109 North Carolina, Madison County, Mars Hill, Long Ridge — Mars Hill Anderson Rosenwald School1928
is listed on the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the InteriorMap (db m229409) HM
110 North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury — Joseph Charles Price High School1932-1969
National Historic Register April 21, 2010 A school of great heritage and academic success in times of repressionMap (db m238886) HM
111 North Carolina, Wake County, Apex — Apex ElementaryApex Consolidated High School
Apex Elementary, a public school for Black students, opened in 1932 during the era of segregation. Apex was one of over 5000 schools built to improve education for Black children, the result of collaboration between Booker T. Washington and . . . Map (db m233977) HM
112 North Carolina, Wake County, Apex — Friendship SchoolEst. 1923
J. Rosenwald of Sears and Roebuck ($700), the Black Community ($890) and the State of NC funded the original Friendship School located .3 miles east. During the Jim Crow Era, the Rosenwald Fund helped build 5,300 schools from MD to TX from 1913 . . . Map (db m233972) HM
113 North Carolina, Wake County, Fuquay-Varina — Fuquay Consolidated School
Fuquay Consolidated School received funding from the Rosenwald Fund in 1918. The first class was held the following year. Fuquay Consolidated School was built on the four teacher plan. Fuquay Consolidated School was among the first to benefit . . . Map (db m233779) HM
114 North Carolina, Wake County, Holly Springs — Holly Springs Elementary School
A public school for Black children stood here from the 1920s until the early 1970s. It was one of 5,000 schools envisioned by Booker T. Washington, that philanthropist Julius Rosenwald helped build for Black children in the South. Donations . . . Map (db m233796) HM
115 North Carolina, Wake County, Raleigh, Southwest Raleigh — H-77 — Berry O'Kelly School
Begun 1910. Early Negro teacher training school. Named for benefactor. Later used as elementary school. Closed in 1966.Map (db m145335) HM
116 North Carolina, Washington County, Creswell — Cherry Colored Schoolcirca 1920's — (A Rosenwald School) —
Conceived in the 1900's by black educator Booker T. Washington and his Tuskegee staff. The Rosenwald program represented a massive effort to improve black rural schooling in the South through public-private partnership. Rosenwald schools were also . . . Map (db m57043) HM
117 North Carolina, Wilkes County, Wilkesboro — Lincoln Heights School1924-1968
Built in 1924 as a six teacher brick Rosenwald School and served as a “Haven of Knowledge” for colored students in Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Caldwell, Wilkes and Yadkin Counties. The original structure was an H-shape design. The Julius Rosenwald . . . Map (db m210435) HM
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118 Oklahoma, Creek County, Bristow — The Julius Rosenwald Fund / Creek County Rosenwald Schools
Julius Rosenwald Fund. In 1912, Tuskegee Institute President Dr. Booker T. Washington invited Jewish-American philanthropist Julius Rosenwald to serve on the Tuskegee board of directors to help African American education, where rural, . . . Map (db m232470) HM
119 South Carolina, Aiken County, Aiken — 2-50 — Aiken Graded School
This park is the site of Aiken Graded School, a two-story brick school built 1924-25. It was built for black pupils in grades 1-7 and was one of almost 500 S.C. schools funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation 1917-1932. Black Aiken . . . Map (db m239018) HM
120 South Carolina, Anderson County, Pendleton — 4-38 — "The Hundreds"
This area was a hub of African-American life from the late-19th to mid-20th centuries. Anderson County Training School, built ca. 1922 as a Rosenwald school, closed in 1954 under the equalization program for black and white schools. It burned in . . . Map (db m54824) HM
121 South Carolina, Berkeley County, Moncks Corner — 8-66 — Berkeley Training High School
(Front text) Berkeley Training High School, located here from 1955 to 1970, replaced a four-room wood school 1 mi. S at Main St. and Old U.S. Hwy. 52. That school, built in 1918-1920 at a cost of $6,700, had been partially funded by the . . . Map (db m41606) HM
122 South Carolina, Berkeley County, Moncks Corner — 8-39 — Dixie Training School / Berkeley Training High School
[Front] Berkeley Training High School, first called Dixie Training School, stood here from 1920 until the 1980s. The first public school for blacks in Moncks Corner was founded in 1880. It held classes in local churches until its first . . . Map (db m29133) HM
123 South Carolina, Berkeley County, St. Stephen — 8-51 — St. Stephen Colored School / St. Stephen High School
(Marker Front)St. Stephen Colored School St. Stephen Colored School, the first public African American school in St. Stephen, was built here in 1924-25. A three-room frame building, it was one of almost 500 schools in S.C. funded in part . . . Map (db m29334) HM
124 South Carolina, Charleston County, Lincolnville — 10-47 — Lincolnville School / Lincolnville Elementary School
Lincolnville School Lincolnville School, the first public school for black students in this community, stood here from 1924 to 1953. Built at a cost of $6,100, it was one of more than 5000 schools in the South funded in part by the Julius . . . Map (db m223811) HM
125 South Carolina, Dillon County, Latta — 17-15 — Pine Hill A.M.E. Church / Pine Hill Rosenwald School
(side 1) Pine Hill A.M.E. Church This church, founded in 1876, was in Marion County before Dillon County was created in 1910. At first on S.C. Hwy. 34, the church acquired this site in 1891 when Alfred Franklin Page (1863-1929) and . . . Map (db m48927) HM
126 South Carolina, Florence County, Mars Bluff — 21-14 — Mt. Zion Rosenwald School
[Front] This school, built in 1925, was the first public school for African American students in the Mars Bluff community. One of more than 5000 schools in the South funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation, it features a standard . . . Map (db m37335) HM
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127 South Carolina, Greenville County, Fountain Inn — 23-45 — Fountain Inn Rosenwald School
[Front]: The Fountain Inn Rosenwald School, also known as the Fountain Inn Colored School, was a complex of several buildings built here from 1928 to 1942. The first school, a frame seven-room elementary school for grades 1-7, was a . . . Map (db m50524) HM
128 South Carolina, Greenville County, Simpsonville — 23-53 — Cedar Grove Baptist Church/ Simpsonville Rosenwald School
(front) Cedar Grove Baptist Church According to tradition, this African-American church was organized by Rev. Tom Jones shortly after the Civil War. It held its first services in a brush arbor, then built its first permanent church . . . Map (db m168395) HM
129 South Carolina, Greenville County, Simpsonville — 23-56 — Old Pilgrim Baptist Church / Old Pilgrim Rosenwald School
(front) Old Pilgrim Baptist Church This church was founded in 1868 by black members of nearby Clear Spring Baptist Church who named their new church Pilgrim Baptist Church. Rev. John Abraham, their first pastor, held services in a . . . Map (db m198265) HM
130 South Carolina, Horry County, Loris — 26-20 — Loris Training School
[Marker Front] Loris Training School, which stood here from 1928 to 1955, was the first school for black students in Loris and other nearby communities. Built at a cost of $4,700, it was one of more than 5000 schools in the South funded in . . . Map (db m26754) HM
131 South Carolina, Horry County, Murrells Inlet — 26-15 — St. James Rosenwald School
Marker Front:
St. James Rosenwald School, which stood here from the late 1920s until the early 1970s, was one of several African-American schools in Horry County funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation. Rev. Smart Small, Sr. . . . Map (db m27331) HM
132 South Carolina, Horry County, Myrtle Beach — 26-17 — Myrtle Beach Colored School
Myrtle Beach Colored School stood here from the early 1930s to 2001. The first public school for African-American students in Myrtle Beach, it was a six-room frame building similar to the schools funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation . . . Map (db m23510) HM
133 South Carolina, Laurens County, Gray Court — 30-10 — Laurens County Training School
[Front]: The Laurens County Training School, located here 1924-1954, had its origins in Gray Court School, a one-room school founded ca. 1890 on the grounds of Pleasant View Baptist Church. The training school, opened in 1924 in a . . . Map (db m22904) HM
134 South Carolina, Newberry County, Pomaria — 36-20 — Hope Rosenwald School
This school, built in 1925-26 at a cost of $2,900, was one of more than 500 rural African-American schools in S.C. funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation between 1917 and 1932. The original two-acre lot for the school was donated by . . . Map (db m42139) HM
135 South Carolina, Oconee County, Westminster — 37-20 — Retreat Rosenwald School
[Front]: This school, often called Retreat Colored School, was built in 1923 for the African-American students in and near Westminster. A two-room, two-teacher, elementary school, it was built by local builder William Walker Bearden of . . . Map (db m53235) HM
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136 South Carolina, Orangeburg County, Bowman — 38-34 — Bowman Rosenwald School
Bowman Rosenwald School, which stood here from 1927 to 1952, was one of several African-American schools in Orangeburg County funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation. The school, built in 1926-27 at a cost of $6,000, was a five-room . . . Map (db m43525) HM
137 South Carolina, Orangeburg County, Neeses — 38 37 — Rocky Swamp Rosenwald School
(front) This is the site of the Rocky Swamp Rosenwald School, a frame three-room school built here in 1920-21 for African-American students in Neeses and vicinity. An elementary school with two to three teachers in grades 1-9, it was one of . . . Map (db m103398) HM
138 South Carolina, Orangeburg County, Orangeburg — 38-40 — Felton Training School & Teacherage
Felton Training School was completed in 1925 and was financed in part by the Rosenwald Fund (1917-1948). It was a four-teacher school for African American students built according to Rosenwald floor plan no. 400. Felton was a practice school . . . Map (db m223748) HM
139 South Carolina, Orangeburg County, Orangeburg — 38-31 — Great Branch School and Teacherage
(Front text) The Great Branch School, which stood here from 1918 to the early 1960s, was one of the first Rosenwald schools in S.C. A two-room frame school built in 1917-18, it was typical of the rural black schools funded in part by the . . . Map (db m80046) HM
140 South Carolina, Richland County, Columbia — 40-172 — Pine Grove Rosenwald School
This school, built in 1923 at a cost of $2,500, is one of 500 African-American schools in S.C. funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation from 1917 to 1932. It is a two-room school typical of smaller Rosenwald schools. From 1923 to . . . Map (db m46343) HM
141 South Carolina, Richland County, Irmo — 40-113 — Richlex School Site
Julius Rosenwald, Chicago philanthropist and president of Sears, Roebuck & Co., (1910-1925), helped fund this black school, built 1918. The original two-room structure was named in Rosenwald's honor and the school's curriculum eventually included . . . Map (db m42157) HM
142 South Carolina, Saluda County, Ridge Spring — 41-13 — Ridge Hill School / Faith Cabin Library
Ridge Hill School This school, built in 1934, replaced the Ridge Hill Rosenwald School, a six-classroom frame school built in 1923-24. That school was funded in part by the Julius Rosenwald Foundation, building more than 500 African-American . . . Map (db m41548) HM
143 South Carolina, Union County, Union — 44-19 — Poplar Grove School
(Front) Poplar Grove School opened in 1927 as a four-classroom school for African American students in Union Co. An extra classroom was added in 1941. In the mid-1960s the original four classrooms were removed and the remaining large . . . Map (db m159621) HM
144 South Carolina, York County, Fort Mill — 46-68 — George Fish School
This was the site of Fort Mill's longest operating school dedicated to African Americans. Built on a 4-acre parcel acquired in 1925, the brick school opened in 1926 and cost $12,200, a portion of which was paid by the Julius Rosenwald Fund. The . . . Map (db m175647) HM
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145 Tennessee, Gibson County, Milan — Gibson County Training School
The historic Training school for Negroes was constructed in 1926 with $2,500 required donations from the Milan Negro citizens, $16,000 of public school funds, and $1,500 from the Julius Rosenwald Fund. Tuskegee Institute Principal Booker T. . . . Map (db m68484) HM
146 Tennessee, Loudon County, Loudon — 1E 130 — Dunbar Rosenwald School
With support from the Julius Rosenwald Fund, the African American community, and public funds, Dunbar Rosenwald School was built in 1923 at a cost of $5,700. The only Rosenwald school in the county for approximately 258 school-age children . . . Map (db m167260) HM
147 Tennessee, Marion County, South Pittsburg — 2B 33 — McReynolds High School
In 1917 no high school for African Americans existed in Marion County. That year Brown McReynolds led a committee to establish an African American high school. The following year a school for African American students opened in a rented space. In . . . Map (db m184066) HM
148 Tennessee, Maury County, Mount Pleasant — 3D 76 — Clarke Training School1922-1969
In the early 1920s, African Americans Joseph Worley, Andrew Polk, and Finn Wray, along with the community, city and county governments secured funds to build the “Mt. Pleasant Colored School.” A Rosenwald facility, it was later named . . . Map (db m152135) HM
149 Tennessee, Rutherford County, Murfreesboro — 3A 244 — Holloway High School1929 - 1968
In 1929 Holloway High School was erected on this site for African American students in Rutherford County. It was named in honor of local attorney, Mr. E. C. Holloway, who advocated for improving African American schools in the county. The last . . . Map (db m146032) HM
150 Tennessee, Rutherford County, Smyrna — Smyrna Rosenwald School
1870 Clem Ross gives land for Mt. View Church and School 1874 Richard Benson sells land to Mt. View trustees for church and school for $5. School was built by Ross family and Mt. View Church Family. 1912 Julius Rosenwald . . . Map (db m146614) HM
151 Tennessee, Shelby County, Memphis, North Memphis — 4E 146 — Manassas High School / The Cora P. Taylor Auditorium
Manassas High School Manassas High School was established by Spencer Johnson and others in 1899 on the west side of Manassas Street. Originally a two-room framed structure in 1900, more rooms were added between 1902 and 1904. In 1918, a . . . Map (db m87974) HM
152 Tennessee, Shelby County, Memphis, Orange Mound — 4E 163 — Melrose School1914-1979
Melrose School was an educational, cultural and civic center of the Orange Mound African-American community. Completed by the New Deal's Public Works Administration in 1938. This structure added to the original Rosenwald school's capacity to . . . Map (db m149029) HM
153 Tennessee, Sullivan County, Kingsport — 1A 143 — Douglass High School1928-1966
(Side One) The only school for African Americans in Kingsport began in 1913 as the Oklahoma Grove School near downtown. With Rosenwald and community funds, the first Douglass School building was constructed in 1928. A new structure was . . . Map (db m76645) HM
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154 Tennessee, Sumner County, Bethpage — 3A 231 — Durham's Chapel Rosenwald School1923-1962
Built in 1923 for African Americans during the era of racial segregation, the two-room Durham's Chapel Rosenwald School was used until 1962. It was constructed with funds from the African American community, the county, and the Rosenwald Fund, . . . Map (db m151859) HM
155 Tennessee, Sumner County, Gallatin — 3B 62 — Cairo Rosenwald School1923-1959
Located 2.6 miles south of here is the Cairo Rosenwald School. Completed in 1923, it provided educational opportunities for African American children until 1959. Funding for the school's construction was provided by the African American community, . . . Map (db m178545) HM
156 Tennessee, Sumner County, Gallatin — 3B 73 — Union High School1922-1970
Completed in 1922 on East Winchester Street, Union High School was Sumner County's first and only secondary school for African-American youth. The African-American community, public, and Rosenwald Funds provided funding for construction. The first . . . Map (db m151861) HM
157 Tennessee, Wilson County, Lebanon — 3A 215 — Wilson County Training School
Wilson County Training School for African-American students operated on this site from 1923 to 1969. The Rosenwald buildings included a 1923 elementary school and a 1928 high school. In the 1950s the high school was replaced and the elementary . . . Map (db m157272) HM
158 Texas, Brazoria County, West Columbia — 13949 — Columbia Rosenwald School
A grant from the Rosenwald Foundation of Chicago led to the establishment of a local school for African American students. The foundation represented a collaboration between Julius Rosenwald, President of Sears, Roebuck, and Company, and the . . . Map (db m83276) HM
159 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 17060 — Moorland YMCA Building
In 1928, the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) of Dallas recognized a growing need for expanded facilities across the city. In the African American neighborhood of North Dallas, citizens raised $75,000 ($25,000 more than their goal) in . . . Map (db m81308) HM
160 Texas, Fort Bend County, Kendleton — 9057 — Powell Point School
William E. Kendall, an Anglo lawyer from Richmond, Texas, subdivided his plantation here into 100-acre farm tracts in 1869. He sold the land exclusively to Freedmen and by the 1880s a distinctly African American community named Kendleton had . . . Map (db m201991) HM
161 Texas, Henderson County, Chandler — The Antioch Rosenwald School
Julius Rosenwald was a Jewish American philanthropist. He believed the most serious problem of the United States was the plight of Black Americans. Dr. Booker T. Washington, though having been a slave, rose to become the nationally respected . . . Map (db m229538) HM
162 Texas, Houston County, Kennard — 11241 — Former Rosenwald School(Now "The Little Red Schoolhouse")
A symbol of Black America's pride in education, plus crusade of Julius Rosenwald (1862-1932), a Chicagoan who in 1913 began to fund school buildings for Negroes. By 1920, when this one-teacher structure was built at Ratcliff (4 miles east), . . . Map (db m201868) HM
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163 Texas, Travis County, Manor — 12587 — Union Lee Baptist Church
According to oral tradition, this congregation began meeting together for outdoor worship services in 1874. In 1884, Leonard Eck donated land, the B.J. Lee family gave a building, and the church was formally organized with the Rev. Anthony Winn as . . . Map (db m26696) HM
164 Virginia, Albemarle County, Cobham — GA-48 — St. John School — Rosenwald Funded
The St. John School, built here in 1922–1923, served African-American students during the segregation era. Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears Roebuck and Co., collaborated with Booker T. Washington in a school-building campaign begining in . . . Map (db m102560) HM
165 Virginia, Bath County, Millboro — Q-36 — T. C. Walker School
T.C. Walker School, which opened in 1930, was named for Thomas Calhoun Walker a former slave from Gloucester County who became the first African American attorney in Virginia. It cost $4,600, and was underwritten with $500 from the Julius Rosenwald . . . Map (db m69471) HM
166 Virginia, Bath County, Thomastown — Q-37 — Union Hurst School
Union Hurst, a school for African Americans, was built near here on Pine Hurst Heights Road between 1924 and 1925. The school was built with the assistance of the Julius Rosenwald Fund, a program that helped build some 5,000 schools for African . . . Map (db m70245) HM
167 Virginia, Brunswick County, Meredithville — SN-67 — Saint Paul’s Chapel SchoolRosenwald Funded
Among the earliest of the more than a dozen Julius Rosenwald Schools built in Brunswick County, Saint Paul’s Chapel School was constructed as a one-teacher standard plan in 1920 under the initial wave of Tuskegee Institute-administered building . . . Map (db m107433) HM
168 Virginia, Buckingham County, Dillwyn — BK2 — Buckingham Training SchoolDillwyn, Virginia — Buckingham County —
The Buckingham Training School sits on 9.25 acres and was established as a result of Stephen J. Ellis' longtime efforts to establish a secondary school for African American students in the Buckingham County area. Ellis first organized the . . . Map (db m181214) HM
169 Virginia, Buckingham County, Dillwyn — F-62 — Buckingham Training School
One mile southeast stood Buckingham Training School, the first high school in the county for African American students. In 1919 the Rev. Stephen J. Ellis organized the County-Wide League for School Improvement to persuade the Buckingham County . . . Map (db m29157) HM
170 Virginia, Campbell County, Rustburg — L-24 — Campbell County Training School
Campbell County Training School (CCTS) opened here ca. 1923 after African American citizens campaigned for better schools. The black community, the county, and the Julius Rosenwald Fund paid for its construction. Rosenwald, inspired . . . Map (db m181140) HM
171 Virginia, Charles City County, Charles City — Dedicated To LearningRuthville High School
Schools were precious to a community denied education for centuries. Following the Civil War one and two-room schools for "colored" children were established around the county. It was here in Ruthville, however, that a commitment to learning first . . . Map (db m26335) HM
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172 Virginia, Charles City County, Charles City — Wryanoke & Parrish HillCharles City County, Virginia
The Weanoc Indians gave this area its name. The Minge family settled much of the Weyanoke peninsula during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Landmarks have included Weyanoke Parish Church, Tyler’s Mill, a steamboat landing, a post office at . . . Map (db m59618) HM
173 Virginia, Charlotte County, Charlotte Court House — CR1 — Central High SchoolCharlotte Court House, Virginia — Charlotte County —
Central High School opened in 1939 as Charlotte County's first African American high school. Before its construction, African American students attended the Charlotte Training School, which had been built between 1928 and 1929 with . . . Map (db m182502) HM
174 Virginia, Charlotte County, Red Oak — 31 — Salem SchoolRed Oak, Virginia — Charlotte County — Reported permanently removed
After the Civil War, in the Red Oak area of Charlotte County, many freed slaves were welcomed to worship at Antioch Baptist Church, a traditionally white church. The Antioch congregation helped raise money to build Salem Baptist Church in . . . Map (db m30999) HM
175 Virginia, Charlotte County, Red Oak — CR4 — Salem SchoolRed Oak, Virginia — Charlotte County —
After the Civil War, in the Red Oak area of Charlotte County, many freed slaves were welcomed to worship at Antioch Baptist Church, a traditionally white church. The Antioch congregation helped raise money to build Salem Baptist Church in . . . Map (db m182464) HM
176 Virginia, Chesterfield County, Midlothian — O-75 — Midlothian Elementary School
First African Baptist Church of Coalfield, which stood about a mile southeast of here, opened a school for African Americans in 1866. After a fire in 1877, the congregation moved here and renamed itself First Baptist Church in Midlothian. Church . . . Map (db m180215) HM
177 Virginia, Cumberland County, Cartersville — 7 — Rosenwald School at CartersvilleCartersville, Virginia — Civil Rights in Education Heritage Trail® —
Julius Rosenwald, a former president of Sears, Roebuck & Co., continued the efforts made by numerous philanthropists to bring education to African Americans in the South. During the early 1900s, funding for schools was scarce; the South had half . . . Map (db m21159) HM
178 Virginia, Emporia — GR1 — Greensville County Training SchoolEmporia, Virginia — Greensville County —
The Greensville County Training School (GCTS) began sometime before 1912 as a small wood-frame building and went on to contribute to African American education in Emporia for more than 50 years. An addition in 1929 resulted in GCTS being one . . . Map (db m180459) HM
179 Virginia, Fairfax — Fairfax Rosenwald School
The Fairfax Rosenwald School or “Fairfax Colored School” was constructed in 1925–26 on this site. It replaced an earlier African-American school on Main Street east of the Fairfax Cemetery. In 1917, Julius Rosenwald, president of . . . Map (db m29482) HM
180 Virginia, Fauquier County, Marshall — The Rosenwald School in Rectortown, "No. 12"
In 1912, Booker T. Washington, head of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, asked Julius Rosenwald, a Jewish Philanthropist and President of Sears, Roebuck & Company, to serve on the Board of Directors at Tuskegee. Their unique partnership led . . . Map (db m160918) HM
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181 Virginia, Fauquier County, Warrenton — Rosenwald Schools in Fauquier
In 1912, Booker T. Washington, head of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, asked Julius Rosenwald, a Jewish Philanthropist and President of Sears, Roebuck & Company, to serve on the board of directors at Tuskegee. Their unique partnership led to the . . . Map (db m137506) HM
182 Virginia, Gloucester County, Gloucester — NW-21 — Gloucester Training School
Built on this site in 1921 the Gloucester Training School became the first public high school for African Americans in Gloucester County. Thomas Calhoun Walker, Jr. and others constructed a wooden building with gifts from the Rosenwald Fund and . . . Map (db m30114) HM
183 Virginia, Gloucester County, Gloucester Point — Woodville SchoolNational Registry Property
Woodville School is an important monument to Gloucester County and the African American community who strove to ensure quality education for their children in the early 20th century. Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears, Roebuck and Company, aided . . . Map (db m30122) HM
184 Virginia, Goochland County, Crozier — First Union School
First Union School has been placed on the National Register of Historic Places and the Virginia Landmarks Register 1926Map (db m170080) HM
185 Virginia, Goochland County, Goochland — SA-12 — Second Union School
Second Union School, which operated until 1959 is the oldest-surviving of the 10 Rosenwald schools built in Goochland County. The African American community and Goochland County contributed funds to the building. Constructed in 1918, the building is . . . Map (db m31607) HM
186 Virginia, Henrico County, Henrico — HC-21 — Chatsworth School
Chatsworth School was built circa 1915 as a one-room schoolhouse for the black children of the Antioch Community. Chatsworth was one of approximately twenty black schools in Henrico County supervised by the visionary educator, Virginia E. Randolph. . . . Map (db m25489) HM
187 Virginia, Isle of Wight County, Smithfield — K-177 — Christian Home School
African Americans prioritized education after Emancipation, and many attended one-or two-room schools built alongside churches in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Christian Home School was built eight miles south of here, near Christian Home . . . Map (db m243623) HM
188 Virginia, King William County, King William — O 18-a — King William Training School
King William Training School was erected here in 1922-23 on the site of the King William Academy (1903-22). The Rosenwald Foundation, which built more than 5,300 black schools in the South, the African American community, and the county funded the . . . Map (db m47168) HM
189 Virginia, Lexington — I-27 — Lylburn Downing School
Lylburn Downing School opened here in 1927 after the Home and School League, an organization of local Black parents and citizens. campaigned for equitable schools. Built with financial support from the Black community. Rockbridge County, and . . . Map (db m207788) HM
190 Virginia, Louisa County, Gum Spring — W-243 — Shady Grove (Rosenwald) School
African Americans in this area organized a patrons' league and campaigned in the 1920s for a new school to replace the inadequate facility then in use. Shady Grove School, built on a standard one-teacher architectural plan, opened here in 1925 for . . . Map (db m170106) HM
191 Virginia, Louisa County, Louisa — W-238 — Richardson and Morton Schools
Louisa Training School, the county’s first high school for African American students, was built three miles northwest in 1926 with aid from the Rosenwald Fund. In 1953, Archie Gibbs Richardson High School replaced it here as part of an . . . Map (db m107854) HM
192 Virginia, Lunenburg County, Victoria — SN-70 — Lunenburg High School
African American patrons, lacking facilities for secondary education, established Lunenburg Training School here about 1920. The school benefited from the support of the Jeanes Fund, which sponsored African American supervisors of education in rural . . . Map (db m182557) HM
193 Virginia, Lynchburg, Tyreeanna — Q-6-46 — Megginson Rosenwald School
The Megginson School was built here ca. 1923 for the African American students in the Pleasant Valley community, then part of Campbell County. Albert Megginson (1831-1923), formerly enslaved, purchased land in this area after the Civil War and later . . . Map (db m179861) HM
194 Virginia, Manassas — The Brown School1869 - 1954
The earliest story on record of educating local African American students began ca. 1869, when the Manassas Village Colored School opened on the corner of Liberty and Prince William Streets. This two-room frame structure was a private school, . . . Map (db m214238) HM
195 Virginia, Martinsville — A-136 — Dry Bridge School
Henry County opened a new Dry Bridge School just south of here in 1928 after the School Improvement League, an organization of African Americans living east of Martinsville, campaigned under the leadership of the Rev. W. F. Geter to replace the . . . Map (db m205807) HM
196 Virginia, Mathews County, Mathews — ND-17 — Thomas Hunter (Rosenwald) School
African Americans formed the Mathews Educational League in 1923 and raised $9,900 to build a four-room school here in 1926-1927. Donations came mainly from the black community, with additional contributions from white residents, the county school . . . Map (db m176022) HM
197 Virginia, Mecklenburg County, South Hill — Z-159 — Mecklenburg County Training School
In 1915, four influential African American residents of South Hill—the Rev. J. H. Simmons, Mary E. Simmons, Robert Walker, and James E. Skipwith—established the Mecklenburg County Training School for black students. The school operated in the . . . Map (db m107443) HM
198 Virginia, Middlesex County, Saluda — OC-46 — St. Clare Walker High School
African American residents of Middlesex County established the Langston Training School (later the Middlesex Training School) in 1917 to serve elementary and high school students. The Rosenwald Fund supported construction of a new building ca. 1921. . . . Map (db m175980) HM
199 Virginia, Montgomery County, Christiansburg — EducationAfrican Americans in Montgomery County
Recently emancipated African Americans yearned for education after the Civil War. They worked to build schools and educate themselves, often with assistance from the Freedmen's Bureau. Freedmen's Bureau agent, Captain Charles Schaeffer, helped . . . Map (db m209264) HM
200 Virginia, Northampton County, Cape Charles — WY-73 — Cape Charles Colored School
Constructed in 1928, this school opened about 1930 for African American children in Cape Charles during legalized segregation. The building was constructed with contributions from the local African American community, the State Literary Fund, . . . Map (db m51004) HM

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Apr. 25, 2024