User:Eurodog/sandbox175: Difference between revisions
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| group1 = Higher education (public) |
| group1 = Higher education (public) |
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| list1 = |
| list1 = |
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* [[Prairie View A&M University]] ( |
* [[Prairie View A&M University]] (founded 1876)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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⚫ | |||
* [[St. Philip's Normal & Industrial School]] ([[San Antonio]]; founded 1898)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
* [[St. Philip's Normal & Industrial School]] ([[San Antonio]]; founded 1898)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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| group2 = Higher education ([[nonsectarian]]) |
| group2 = Higher education ([[nonsectarian]]) |
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* Gibbons High School ([[Paris, Texas|Paris]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
* Gibbons High School ([[Paris, Texas|Paris]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* State Colored Orphan's Home (1½ miles south of [[Gilmer, Texas|Gilmer]]; 1900–1943)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
* State Colored Orphan's Home (1½ miles south of [[Gilmer, Texas|Gilmer]]; 1900–1943)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* E. |
* [[E.H. Anderson High School]] ([[Austin, Texas|Austin]]; founded 1907; integrated 1971; namesake: Ernest H. Anderson; 1850–1885; renamed in 1938: E.C. Anderson; namesake of Ernest's brother, [[Laurine Cecil Anderson]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* Emmett J. Scott High School ([[Tyler, Texas|Tyler]]; 1923-1970)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
* Emmett J. Scott High School ([[Tyler, Texas|Tyler]]; 1923-1970)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* Liberty Training School ([[Liberty, Texas|Liberty]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* The Clayton Industrial High School ([[Manor, Texas|Manor]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
* The Clayton Industrial High School ([[Manor, Texas|Manor]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* Montopolis Negro School ([[Montopolis, Austin, Texas|Montopolis]] neighborhood of [[Austin, Texas|Austin]]; founded 1891)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
* Montopolis Negro School ([[Montopolis, Austin, Texas|Montopolis]] neighborhood of [[Austin, Texas|Austin]]; founded 1891)<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* [[Charlton-Pollard High School]] ([[Beaumont, Texas|Beaumont]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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* [[Albert Sidney Johnston High School]] ([[Austin, Texas|Austin]])<div style="margin-left:2em"> |
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| group8 = Middle schools |
| group8 = Middle schools |
Latest revision as of 22:55, 14 February 2019
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- Category:Texas education navigational boxes
- Category:Segregation academies in Texas
- Category:Relocated schools
- Category:Historically black schools
- Category:Historically segregated African-American schools in the United States
- Category:High schools in Texas
- Category:Former high schools in Texas
- Category:African-American history of Texas
- Category:HBCUs in Texas
Colleges
[edit]Houston College
[edit]- Founded 1885 by John Thomas Hodges (1868–1942), who served as founding President. In 1894, he graduated from Atlanta University. He was married to Emma Sarah Morton (maiden; 1872–1952), who also was an educator.[2][3]
- 1883: A.B., Oberlin
- 1886: B.D., Chicago
- 1887: A.M. (honorary), Oberlin
- 1890: D.D., Selma
- 1906: President, Western College & Industrial Institute, Macon, Missouri
- 1926: LL.D., Arkansas Baptist College
- Member: National Education Association
- President:
- Arkansas Baptist College, Little Rock, Arkansas
- Little Rock College
- Guadalupe College, Seguin, Texas
- Houston College, Houston
- Simmons University, Louisville, Kentucky
- 1929–1936: American Baptist Theological Seminary, East Nashville, Tennessee
- President:
Notes and references
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Guadalupe College: A Case History in Negro Higher Education, 1884–1936" (masters thesis), by Anne Brawner (née Florence Anne Beauchamp; 1933–2012), Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas, May 1980; OCLC 6617859
- ^ "Emma S. Morton" (entry), compiled under the direction of Myron Winslow Adams (1860–1939), General Catalog of Atlanta University: 1867–1918, (1918), p. 62
- ^ The National Cyclopedia of the Colored Race (Vol. 1), Clement Richardson (ed.), Montgomery: National Publishing Company, Inc. (1919)
- ^ "Losses in Oberlin Family," Oberlin Alumni Magazine, Vol. 42, No. 6, June 1946, p. 23
- ^ (still image) Prof. James H. Garnett, A. M., D. D., Jefferson City, Missouri, (1901), Digital Collections, New York Public Library – Astor, Lennox, and Tilden FoundationOriginal source: Sermons, Addresses and Reminiscences and Important Correspondence, With a Picture Gallery of Eminent Ministers and Scholars, by Elias Camp Morris (1855–1922), Nashville: National Baptist Publishing Board (1901); OCLC 47617995, 23524527
- ^ Who's who of the Colored Race: A General Biographical Dictionary, (Vol. 1), Frank Lincoln Mather (ed.), Chicago: Memento Edition: Half-Century Anniversary of Negro Freedom in U.S. (1915)