Home / Full timeline / Wealthy Whites in Kirkwood, Missouri try to block Blacks from purchasing land in their community to start a school. The Black group is still able to purchase the land and start the school.
Wealthy Whites in Kirkwood, Missouri try to block Blacks from purchasing land in their community to start a school. The Black group is still able to purchase the land and start the school.
1890 (Jul 1)
Black Americans looking to begin a vocational school for Blacks bought the Kirkwood, Missouri, property on which Anna Sneed Cairns had been operating a female seminary. The wealthy, white community offered Cairns $27,000 for the land in an attempt to keep it from being sold to Blacks. But Cairns had little reason to appease the Kirkwood community as her decision to relocate her school stemmed from a quarrel with the town board. Upon settling on a price of $32,000, she accepted a partial payment for the land from Henry Bridgewater, the proprietor of two large saloons for Blacks that were reportedly raided frequently. Bridgewater, with his $10,000 donation, became the founder of the first manual training school for Blacks.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.