Dublin Core
Title
Rosenwald Schools
Subject
African American Schools Post 1900
Standards of Learning VS.1a, VS.1g, VS.8b, USII.1a, USII.1d, USII.4c
Standards of Learning VS.1a, VS.1g, VS.8b, USII.1a, USII.1d, USII.4c
Description
Julius Rosenwald, President of Sears & Roebuck, was not only an entreprenuer, but he was also a philanthropist. Rosenwald created the Rosenwald Fund to help build schools for disadvantaged African Americans in the South during the segregation era. By 1932, the Rosenwald Fund helped build over 5300 schools in the South. Earlier histories have reported that there were three Rosenwald Schools in Louisa County: the Louisa Training School, the historic Shady Grove School, and a third school that has not yet been positively identified but what Louisa County historians believe to be the Mechanicsville school. These photographs are pictures of the three Louisa County Rosenwald Schools (Left: Louisa Training, Middle: Mechanicsville, Right: Shady Grove). To learn more, visit the African American Schools of Louisa County website.
Source
Louisa County Historical Society Collections
Publisher
Louisa County Historical Society
Date
1920s
Rights
All items in our archives have been donated to The Louisa County Historical Society with express permission to use them only for not-for-profit purposes of education and individual research. We make them available online to further those ends. Anyone wishing to use images online or in printed publications must obtain express written permission to do so from the Louisa County Historical Society and the legal copyright holder. Users assume full responsibility for disputes arising from copyright violations or invasions of privacy.
Format
Photograph
Type
Photograph
Identifier
LTS: 054_2008_551_32, Mechanicsville: 054_2008_551_18, Shady Grove: 054_2008_551_2
Contribution Form
Online Submission
No