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Where Were the Rosenwald Schools?
By Patricia Staino

Alumni from 1929-1939, Panther Branch School Lincoln Park School Ware Creek School
Click photos to enlarge and learn more.

Introduction

North Carolina was home to more Rosenwald schools than any other state in the country. Built between 1917 and 1932, these small, wooden structures are located in the state’s rural counties, and once served as the center of rural black community life. Now an effort is under way to find, identify and record the locations of these schools before the structures disappear altogether. But even if the buildings are gone, the legacy of the Rosenwald schools is a cornerstone in the foundation of North Carolina’s public education system.

The schools are named for Julius Rosenwald, who at the time
of the program’s inception was the president of Sears, Roebuck and Company. Rosenwald had become friendly with black educator Booker T. Washington and began making charitable donations to the black secondary schools and colleges that Washington’s Tuskegee Institute was helping to establish. Washington asked if a small portion of one $25,000 gift could be used for elementary school programs and Rosenwald agreed, with one stipulation; rather than give the money to black communities, he wanted to match funds that the people had raised themselves to fund the schools. A couple of years later, he set up the Rosenwald Fund to continue this work on a larger scale.

All but seven of the state’s counties had at least one Rosenwald school, although most are concentrated in the piedmont and coastal plain.

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