Training school (United States) Segregated schools for African Americans
A training school , or county training school , was a type of segregated school for African American students found in the United States and Canada. In the Southern United States they were established to educate African Americans at elementary and secondary levels, especially as teachers; and in the Northern United States they existed as educational reformatory schools . A few training schools still exist, however they exist in a different context.
History
Map showing the divide between northern states and southern states after the American Civil War (blue is north, red is south)
The training school movement began in 1911. The southern training schools were supported by northern philanthropists, roughly from 1910 to 1930.[ 1] [ 2] The Slater Fund supported many of the schools.[ 3] [ 4] Philanthropic organizations had their own criteria for funding support.[ 5]
In the segregated Jim Crow South (roughly until the 1950s), schools for African Americans could not be high schools so they were called training schools and “emphasized vocational training and domestic science over academic subjects”.[ 6] In the south they often served African American students from a large area and were often named county training schools. County training schools were established in Alabama starting in 1915.[ 7] Training schools addressed the need for larger and better schools to supplement elementary education in small rural schools and helped meet the demand for teachers. They had an agricultural and industrial training ethos and required support and cooperation from local officials. Many schools were eventually renamed, and became high schools until desegregation when many were closed.
Training schools were also established in northern states and in Canada as educational reformatory schools.
List of U.S. training schools
Listed by southern or northern status, by state, and in alphabetical order by name
Northern states
Connecticut
Iowa
Ohio
Massachusetts
Michigan
New Jersey
North Dakota
Southern states
Alabama
Arkansas
Florida
Georgia
Louisiana
DeSoto Parish Training School in Mansfield, Louisiana ; succeeded by DeSoto High School
East Carroll Parish Training School in Lake Providence, Louisiana
Holy Ghost Training School in Opelousas, Louisiana; succeeded by Holy Ghost High School
Iberia Parish Training School in New Iberia, Louisiana[ 8]
Lafayette Parish Training School in Lafayette, Louisiana[ 8]
Natchitoches Parish Training School in Natchitoches , Louisiana
St. Landry Parish Training School in Opelousas, Louisiana
Tangipegoa Parish Training School in Kentwood, Louisiana[ 8]
Tenses Parish Training School in St. Joseph, Louisiana[ 8]
Webster Training School in Minden, Louisiana ; succeeded by Webster High School
Mississippi
Amite County Training School in Gloster, Mississippi [ 9]
Attala County Training School in Kosciusko, Mississippi [ 10]
Claiborne County Training School
Columbia Training School
Harrison County Training School in Pass Christian, Mississippi
Holmes County Training School in Durant, Mississippi
Leake County Training School in Leake County, Mississippi[ 9]
Lee County Training School in Tupelo, Mississippi ; which became Carver High School (Tupelo, Mississippi)
Lincoln County Training School
Madison County Training School
Madison County Training School
Monroe County Training School in Amory, Mississippi
Neshoba County Training School
Noxubee County Training School in Shuqualak, Mississippi [ 10]
Oktibbeha County Training School in Starkville, Mississippi [ 10]
Pearl River County Training School in Picayune, Mississippi
Pike County Training School in Magnolia, Mississippi [ 10]
Smith County Training School
Stone County Training School in Wiggins, Mississippi ; the first secondary school for Black students in Stone County, Mississippi
Union County Training School in New Albany
Walthall County Training School in Lexie, Walthall County, Mississippi[ 10]
Wilkinson County Training School
Winston County Training School in Louisville, Mississippi
Yazoo County Training School in Yazoo City, Mississippi ; which became Yazoo City Training School and later N. D. Taylor High School
North Carolina
Anderson County Training School in North Carolina
Berry O’Kelly Training School in Method, North Carolina
Bladen County Training School in Elizabethtown, North Carolina
Buncombe County Boys' Training School in Asheville, North Carolina
Caswell County Training School in Caswell County, North Carolina (in Yanceyville, North Carolina ); from 1933–1969
Cleveland County Training School in Shelby, North Carolina ; a Rosenwald School near Wise, North Carolina
Franklin County Training School in Louisburg, North Carolina
Harnett County Training School in Dunn, North Carolina
Hyde County Training School in Sladesville , Hyde County, North Carolina
Lee County Training School in Lee County, North Carolina
Orange County Training School (OCTS) in Chapel Hill , North Carolina; from 1916–1966
Stonewall Jackson Training School in unincorporated Cabarrus County, North Carolina
Warren County Training School in Wise, Warren County, North Carolina; a Rosenwald School
Wilmington Training School in Wilmington, North Carolina where Lewis Thomas Christmas served as principal
South Carolina
Tennessee
Texas
Virginia
Canada
See also
References
^ Carey, Thomas John (July 11, 2017). "Training Schools" . Mississippi Encyclopedia .
^ Link, William A. (May 2000). "Jackson Davis and the Lost World of Jim Crow Education | Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library" . Albert and Shirley Small Special Collection Library, University of Virginia Library, University of Virginia . Special Collections Department, University of Virginia Library and The Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies at the University of Virginia.
^ Redcay, Edward E. (1935). County Training Schools and Public Secondary Education for Negroes in the South (PDF) . Washington, D.C.: John F. Slater Fund and Monumental Printing Co.
^ A Suggested Course of Study for County Training Schools for Negroes in the South . J. P. Bell Company, Inc. July 24, 1917. LCCN 17030810 – via Internet Archive.
^ Rowe, Linda H. (1997). "A History of Black Education and Bruton Heights School, Williamsburg, Virginia" . Colonial Williamsburg Foundation Library .
^ Goldberg, Barry; Shubinski, Barbara (2020). "Black Education and Rockefeller Philanthropy from the Jim Crow South to the Civil Rights Era" . RE:source, Rockefeller Archive Center (RAC) .
^ Jackson, Reid E. (1939). "County Training Schools in Alabama" . The School Review . 47 (9): 683– 694. doi :10.1086/440436 . JSTOR 1082040 . S2CID 143716326 – via JSTOR.
^ a b c d Coxen, James Reason (1940). Directory of Federally Aided All-day Trade and Industrial Education Programs . United States Office of Education. U.S. Office of Education, Federal Security Agency. p. 21.
^ a b Directory of Trade and Industrial Schools . United States Federal Board for Vocational Education. Federal Board for Vocational Education. 1930. pp. 284, 286.{{cite book }}
: CS1 maint: others (link )
^ a b c d e Statistics of Land-grant Colleges and Universities . United States Office of Education. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1928. pp. 37– 38.{{cite book }}
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^ schpr.sc.gov/index.php/Detail/properties/74023
^ https://greenbookofsc.com/locations/manning-training-school/
^ https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=38137
^ https://greenbookofsc.com/locations/laurens-county-training-school/