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Finding hope in early efforts to educate the formerly enslaved

When Black people in the South sought education after the Civil War, they found refuge in Freedmen’s Schools, established by the Freedmen’s Bureau.

Decades later, after the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954, Freedom Schools educated Black children in states that defied the desegregation law.

Why We Wrote This

After the Civil War, efforts to educate the formerly enslaved were wide ranging. Remnants of that move toward equality are still evident today, despite debates over which parts of Black history ought to be taught.

“Free” is the operative word, and this history is startlingly close. The remnants of freedmen’s formal education lie just below the surface of daily life in the South today.

Take Immanuel Institute in Aiken, South Carolina, a shining example of the influence of religious conscience operating on behalf of Black people. The school was founded in 1890 by the Reverend William R. Coles, who came to Aiken with  the approval of the Presbyterian Board of Missions for Freedmen. Enrollment hit 300 in 1906. 

In neighboring Edgefield County, Bettis Academy and Junior College opened in 1881. It was named after once-enslaved Alexander Bettis, who joined other freedmen to start a Baptist church and then founded the school.

The short, three-year history of the Freedmen’s Bureau and the longer stretch of others’ efforts to educate those recently freed from slavery represents the best of us – government and/or religious institutions collaborating with everyday people in the spirit of civil rights and good conscience.

Black people in America have long correlated learning with liberation, largely because of the difficulty endured acquiring an education and the opportunity it promised. Even today, the very act of teaching Black children is radical, not just because it often exposes racism, but because it presumes that education is a civil right.

When Black people in the South sought schooling during Reconstruction, right after the Civil War, they found refuge in Freedmen’s Schools, established by the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands. Commonly known as the Freedmen’s Bureau, it was founded on March 3, 1865, when Congress passed an act to provide resources, including education, to the formerly enslaved. In July of 1866, another bill extended the bureau’s life for two years.

Decades later, after the landmark Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954, Freedom Schools educated Black children in states that defied the desegregation law.

Why We Wrote This

After the Civil War, efforts to educate the formerly enslaved were wide ranging. Remnants of that move toward equality are still evident today, despite debates over which parts of Black history ought to be taught.

“Free” is the operative word, and this history is startlingly – and in my case, personally – close. The remnants of freedmen’s formal education lie just below the surface of daily life in parts of the South today.

As a preteen, I attended Schofield Middle School in Aiken, South Carolina, which was founded in 1871 as the Schofield Normal and Industrial School by Martha Schofield, a Quaker from Pennsylvania seeking to educate formerly enslaved people. It later became a public high school for African Americans and joined the local school system a year before the Brown v. Board of Education decision. It has served as a public middle school since the 1960s.

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