African
American Schools in
In 1878, there was a bill in the Kentucky Senate to
authorize the building of a colored school in District 1 of Ohio County
[source: Journal of the Regular Session of the
Senate of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, December 1877,
p.764]. The bill was said to have passed due to the Democrat vote, according to
the article "Colored voters remember..." in the Hartford Herald,
08/01/1877, p.2. The school teacher at the Hartford Colored School in 1880 was
Joe C. H. Taylor and the school year began in September [source: Hartford Herald,
"The colored school...," 09/01/1880, p.3]. Prof. McDowell from
In 1892, there was an investigation by the Hartford Herald on
behalf of the colored schools and the colored teachers who had not received
their pay. The newspaper reviewed the bookkeeping of the Ohio County school
superintendent and determined the colored teachers were owed their pay [source:
"In case a suit is brought..." and "Cowering beneath the
Herald's revelations" both in the Hartford Herald, 10/26/1892, p.2]
The debate about the disposition of the colored school fund became a political
disagreement between the Democrats and Republicans as to which had done more
for the Negro.
Other schools in Ohio County included Rockport Colored School in District 9
with P. A. Gary as the teacher [source: "Report," Hartford Republican,
11/17/1893, p.4]. The
In 1940, the Negro teachers in Ohio County were Delois Eidson, Kenneth Eidson,
William C. Jackson, Mittie K. Render, and Ethel Tichenor [source: U.S. Federal
Census]. The first schools to be listed as integrated were Beaver Dam
Elementary and High School; Hartford Elementary and High School; and Wayland
Alexander School, all on p.147 of the Kentucky
School Directory, 1962-63.
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Source: Notable
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