Garnet High School Students
Vivian Malone-Jones
A Revolutionary Hero: Agrippa Hull
First Draftee of WWI: Leo A. Pinckney
Private Redder
The Murder of Henry Marrow
David Fagen
1st Lt. John W. Madison's Family
Isreal Crump, Sr.
Early American Entertainment
Napolean Bonaparte Marshall
Captain Laurence Dickson
A Tragic and Hellish Life: Private Herman Perry
Captain Jamison
George Roberts
Lt. Robert W Diez
24th Infantry Regiment Korea
Pvt. George Watson
The Return
Death of James Harrison
Robert Smalls
Eddie Carson: Father of Josephine Baker
Corporal Fred McIntyre
Undeterred
An Invaluable Lesson Outside the Classroom
Garnet High School Basketball Team
A Solitary Figure
Graduates of Oberlin
Julie Hayden
Tennessee Town Kindergarten
One Little Girl
Edith Irby Jones
McIntire's Childrens Home Baseball Team
Bertha Josephine Blue
Give Me An 'A'!
We Finish to Begin
Standing Tall Amid the Glares
Segregated to the Anteroom
The 1st by 17 Years: The Story of Harry S. Murphy,…
Pedro Tovookan Parris
Enslaved No More: Wallace Turnage
Alvin Coffey
John Roy Lynch
A Loving Daughter: Nellie Arnold Plummer
Picking Cotton on Alex Knox's Plantation
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Spelman Grads Class of 1892
Spelman, one of the nation's most highly regarded colleges for women, was founded by Sophia B. Packard and Harriet E. Giles, two friends who were commissioned in 1879 by the Woman's American Baptist Home Mission Society to study the living conditions "among the freedmen of the South." Appalled by the lack of educational opportunity for Black women, the missionaries returned to Boston determined to effect change. On April 11, 1881, they opened a school in the basement of Atlanta's Friendship Baptist Church with $100 provided by the congregation of the First Baptist Church of Medford, Massachusetts. The first eleven pupils, ten women and one girl, were mostly ex-slaves, determined to learn to read the Bible and write.
Totally dedicated, Misses Packard and Giles returned to the North in 1882 for more funds. At a church meeting in Cleveland, Ohio, they were introduced to Mr. John D. Rockefeller who emptied his wallet during the collection and questioned the two women's intentions:
"You know," he said, "there are so many who come here and get us to give money. Then they're gone, and we don't know where they are--where their work is. Do you mean to stick? If you do, you'll hear from me again."
Determined to succeed, the women took an option on an Atlanta site that had been used as barracks and drill grounds for federal troops during the Civil War. Sustained by their faith, Misses Packard and Giles worked diligently to gain additional financial support. Subsequently, title of the property was transferred to the Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary, and in February 1883, the school relocated to its new nine-acre site, which included five frame buildings with both classroom and residence hall space. In an effort to liquidate the debt, more than $4,000 was raised by the Black community, $3,000 by the Negro Baptists of Georgia, and another $1,300 from individual contributions. Other important gifts and contributions kept operating costs at a minimum. Teachers volunteered their services and gifts of furnishings; supplies and clothing were sent from the North. As enrollment steadily increased, the normal school curriculum was expanded to include sewing, cooking, millinery, and other preeminently practical subjects.
In April 1884 on the third anniversary of the founding of the school, Mr. John D. Rockefeller was indeed heard from again. Visiting the school with Mrs. Rockefeller, her sister and her mother, Mrs. Lucy Henry Spelman, Mr. Rockefeller was impressed enormously with the seminary and settled the debt on the property. Later, the name of the school was changed to Spelman Seminary in honor of the Spelman family, longtime activists in the Anti-Slavery Movement.
Source: Spelman Archives
Totally dedicated, Misses Packard and Giles returned to the North in 1882 for more funds. At a church meeting in Cleveland, Ohio, they were introduced to Mr. John D. Rockefeller who emptied his wallet during the collection and questioned the two women's intentions:
"You know," he said, "there are so many who come here and get us to give money. Then they're gone, and we don't know where they are--where their work is. Do you mean to stick? If you do, you'll hear from me again."
Determined to succeed, the women took an option on an Atlanta site that had been used as barracks and drill grounds for federal troops during the Civil War. Sustained by their faith, Misses Packard and Giles worked diligently to gain additional financial support. Subsequently, title of the property was transferred to the Atlanta Baptist Female Seminary, and in February 1883, the school relocated to its new nine-acre site, which included five frame buildings with both classroom and residence hall space. In an effort to liquidate the debt, more than $4,000 was raised by the Black community, $3,000 by the Negro Baptists of Georgia, and another $1,300 from individual contributions. Other important gifts and contributions kept operating costs at a minimum. Teachers volunteered their services and gifts of furnishings; supplies and clothing were sent from the North. As enrollment steadily increased, the normal school curriculum was expanded to include sewing, cooking, millinery, and other preeminently practical subjects.
In April 1884 on the third anniversary of the founding of the school, Mr. John D. Rockefeller was indeed heard from again. Visiting the school with Mrs. Rockefeller, her sister and her mother, Mrs. Lucy Henry Spelman, Mr. Rockefeller was impressed enormously with the seminary and settled the debt on the property. Later, the name of the school was changed to Spelman Seminary in honor of the Spelman family, longtime activists in the Anti-Slavery Movement.
Source: Spelman Archives
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