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African American Teachers in the South, 1890–1940: Powerlessness and the Ironies of Expectations and Protest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Michael Fultz*
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Extract

In an earlier study, an examination of the educational content of the African American monthly press between 1900 and 1930, I was surprised to find meager commentary on issues related to black teachers or on the conditions and practice of teaching in African American schools. For example, the periodicals contained only two full-length articles, both published before 1908, on the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools (NATCS), the most prestigious African American educational organization of the period and aspirant to the title of black NEA. Likewise, the journals virtually ignored the social roles of teachers, rarely highlighting them as role models or lauding their community contributions. Why these omissions occurred is a matter of conjecture, though I speculated in the earlier work that the reasons were associated with the journals' middle-class orientation, which celebrated higher educational achievements by the race more than dwelling upon the deplorable conditions enveloping black common schooling during this troubled time. Given this framework, issues concerning African American teachers were neglected to the extent that a variety of concerns involving black common schooling were glossed over as well.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1995 by the History of Education Society 

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References

1 See Fultz, Michael, “‘Agitate then Brother’: Education in the Black Monthly Periodical Press, 1900–1930” (Ed.D. diss., Harvard Graduate School of Education, 1987) for a complete discussion of the periodicals, their educational content, and their middle-class orientation.Google Scholar

2 Smith, S. L., “Negro Public Schools in the South,” Southern Workman 56 (July 1927): Table 1, 316, and Table 3, 321.Google Scholar

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5 Mamie Garvin Fields with Fields, Karen, Lemon Swamp and Other Places: A Carolina Memoir (New York, 1983), 114. See also Caliver, Ambrose, Rural Elementary Education among Negroes under Jeanes Supervising Teachers, U.S. Office of Education, Bulletin no. 5 (Washington, D.C., 1933), 45–47; Moss, J. W., “Some Problems That Confront the Rural School Teacher,” Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute Gazette 17 (Oct. 1910): 13.Google Scholar

6 See Miller, Carroll L. and Gregg, Howard D., “The Teaching Staff,” Journal of Negro Education 1 (July 1932): 196223. Caliver, , Rural Elementary Education, 16–23, quotation on 20; Williams, W. T. B., “Negro Rural Schools in Virginia,” Southern Workman 32 (Aug. 1903): 367; Blose, and Caliver, , Statistics of the Education of Negroes, 1933–34 and 1935–36, Tables 6 and 7, 24–25. As sociologist Johnson, Charles S. has commented, “Excessive retardation in the rural schools is the inevitable result of the demands of the economic system [cotton growing]. Regardless of how strong the desire to attend school may be, it is secondary to the demands of the system.” See his Growing Up in the Black Belt: Negro Youth in the Rural South (1941; New York, 1967), 111.Google Scholar

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13 Gandy, J. M., “The Needs of Negro Rural Life in Virginia,” Southern Workman 41 (Nov. 1912): 626; Washington, Booker T., “Southern Negro Rural Schools and Teachers,” Southern Workman 38 (Aug. 1909): 426, 429. See also Whiting, Tossie, “The Fields of Usefulness of the Rural Teacher,” Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute Gazette 13 (Apr. 1907): 4. As F. O. Alexander put it, “It is impossible to build an education program in dirt and filth,” Mississippi Educational Journal 11 (Apr.–May 1935): 121–22.Google Scholar

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17 Fields, , Lemon Swamp and Other Places, 209, 126.Google Scholar

18 See Perry, Thelma D., History of the American Teachers Association (Washington, D.C., 1975), 133–62; Smith, Susan Lynn, “‘Sick and Tired of Being Sick and Tired’: Black Women and the National Negro Health Movement, 1915–1950” (Ph.D. diss., University of Wisconsin–Madison, 1991).Google Scholar

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21 Bond, , Education of the Negro in the American Social Order, 275. Du Bois, W. E. B., The Souls of Black Folk (1903; New York, 1969), 78.Google Scholar

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25 Dollard, John, Caste and Class in a Southern Town (1937; Madison, Wis., 1988), 191. See also Powdermaker, , After Freedom, 33–34.Google Scholar

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27 Robinson, W. A., “Problems of the High School from a Salary Standpoint,” The Bulletin 7 (Jan. 1927): 89. Regarding the example cited by Robinson for his third point, it is instructive to note that Powdermaker found that it was the “custom” in Cottonville, as in many other counties in Mississippi, to sell licenses to unqualified black teachers. The man who acted as the intermediary was referred to in the community as a “good nigger.” See Powdermaker, , After Freedom, 317. Similarly, Fields relates that a man sarcastically referred to as “‘the black mayor of Charleston”’ would tell white officials the news of the black community in exchange for handing out jobs, including teaching positions. Fields, , Lemon Swamp and Other Places, 108, 110.Google Scholar

28 Du Bois, W. E. B. and Dill, Augustus, eds., The Common School and the Negro American, Atlanta University Publications, no. 16 (1911; New York, 1968), 137. See also, Woodson, , The Rural Negro, 189.Google Scholar

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32 McCuistion, Fred makes this point inThe South's Negro Teaching Force,” Journal of Negro Education 1 (Apr. 1932): 18; Miller, Carroll and Gregg, Howard D., “The Teaching Staff,” Journal of Negro Education 1 (July 1932): 208.Google Scholar

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35 Robinson, W. A., “Taking Thought for Tomorrow,” The Bulletin 8 (Oct. 1927): 67.Google Scholar

36 Thompson, Charles, “Negro Teachers and the Elimination of Segregated Schools,” Journal of Negro Education 20 (Spring 1951): 138.Google Scholar

37 See, for example, Hansot, Elisabeth and Tyack, David, “A Usable Past: Using History in Educational Policy,” in Policy Making in Education, ed. Lieberman, Ann and McLaughlin, Milbrey W. (Chicago, 1982), 122.Google Scholar