Home / Full timeline / George Bell opens the first Black school in Washington, D.C. It is shut down due to financial difficulties, but later reopens with an average attendance of 65 students.
George Bell opens the first Black school in Washington, D.C. It is shut down due to financial difficulties, but later reopens with an average attendance of 65 students.
1807
The first school for Black American children was built in Washington, D.C., by George Bell with the help of Nicholas Franklin and Moses Liverpool. This effort, by the formerly enslaved who still could not read or write, preceded Congressional establishment of public schools for Blacks in the capital by 57 years. (Public education for whites was authorized in 1804, and two schools opened for them in 1806.) Though financial difficulties soon forced the closing of the school, Bell, with the help of his Resolute Beneficial Society, was able to reopen the facility in 1818. John Adams, the first Black male teacher in the district of Columbia, was part of this second school, which had an average attendance of sixty-five students. By the time the Civil War began, an estimated 1,200 of the 3,172 school-age Blacks were enrolled in some type of privately run school.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.