Hopewell Rosenwald School after construction in 1926-1927 school year. The building adjacent to the school is Hopewell Baptist Church. Photo found in Rosenwald Fund Card File Database, Fisk University Special Collections.
|
Between 2008 and 2010, I researched the last remaining Rosenwald School in McCormick County, South Carolina. I was lucky enough to meet a former student, Georgia Collier-Scott, who was very active in preserving the school-- which was built near the site of the old school and adjacent to Hopewell Baptist. Hopewell Rosenwald was an important additon to a rural community greatly in need. Collier-Scott was a student at the old schoolhouse as well as the new-- and she could still recall, with great clarity, the run-down condition of the old school, also called Hopewell:
Collier-Scott as a young girl.
Courtesy of Collier-Scott.
|
“Hopewell school, as I remember it was a one room wood structure with
one door facing what was then the main highway…with a window on each side
facing each other, and a window in the back. It was not sealed, wooden benches
served as seats for the students, and a wood burning stove furnished heat for
the room. Three ten-inch boards nailed together and painted black, served as
the blackboard…One teacher taught all subjects, and all grade levels.”
When the Rosenwald School Building Program started in 1912, its purpose was to solve issues of inadequate school facilities for rural black communities across the southeast. I'll save the topic of Rosenwald Schools for another post, but I will say that this program was founded in a time when public education funding for African Americans was basically non-existent in South Carolina and most of the southeast. A State Agent for Negro Schools was employed by the South Carolina Department of Education to inspect black schools and to advocate for their improvement. But black education remained an non-issue for many state officials. In my research, it isn't until the 1920's that I see true mention of any concern for the condition of African-American education in State Board of Education records. In a 1927 letter from the State High School Supervisor, J. Daniel, to the State Superintendent of Education, James H. Hope, Daniel stated that he was, "especially anxious to give the negro schools this year a rating and to keep a more accurate check than has heretofore been made." (This was excerpted from my National Register of Historic Places Nomination for Hopewell Rosenwald ).
When the Rosenwald School Building Program started in 1912, its purpose was to solve issues of inadequate school facilities for rural black communities across the southeast. I'll save the topic of Rosenwald Schools for another post, but I will say that this program was founded in a time when public education funding for African Americans was basically non-existent in South Carolina and most of the southeast. A State Agent for Negro Schools was employed by the South Carolina Department of Education to inspect black schools and to advocate for their improvement. But black education remained an non-issue for many state officials. In my research, it isn't until the 1920's that I see true mention of any concern for the condition of African-American education in State Board of Education records. In a 1927 letter from the State High School Supervisor, J. Daniel, to the State Superintendent of Education, James H. Hope, Daniel stated that he was, "especially anxious to give the negro schools this year a rating and to keep a more accurate check than has heretofore been made." (This was excerpted from my National Register of Historic Places Nomination for Hopewell Rosenwald ).
From HistorySouth.org |
Left to Right: Hopewell Rosenwald School ca. 1935-1952, SCDAH School Insurance Photographs and Hopewell in 2009 as listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment