Skip To Content
JEWISH. INDEPENDENT. NONPROFIT.
Culture

Inside the Hidden History of Rosenwald Schools

Julius Rosenwald, the son of Jewish immigrants who fled religious persecution in Germany, turned Sears, Roebuck & Co. into America’s largest retailer. Booker T. Washington, who was born into slavery, created the Tuskegee Institute and led the college for more than 30 years.

Their groundbreaking partnership in the early decades of the 20th century led to a transformative initiative: the creation of 4,978 schools for African American children in 15 Southern and border states.

The program reshaped America. Economists at the Federal Reserve said the Rosenwald Schools were the most significant factor in the narrowing of the South’s racial education gap between World War I and II. Further, they were a meaningful force in the rise of the civil rights movement. Educating Blacks helped belie the canard that African Americans were intellectually inferior and many of the leaders and foot soldiers of the movement attended Rosenwald schools.

I first became aware of these historic structures in early 2015, through a preservationist who had dedicated her career to saving these historic structures. The story shocked me: How could I have never heard of Rosenwald schools before? I am a fifth-generation Jewish Georgian who had spent my life working on progressive causes, a photographer whose art was focused on giving voice to my civic values.

So I set out to tell the story of these schools. Over three and a half years, I drove more than 25,000 miles and photographed 105 of the surviving schoolhouses in all 15 program states. The work includes interiors and exteriors, schools restored and yet-to-be restored, and portraits of people with compelling connections to these schools.

My just-published book, “A Better Life for Their Children,” pairs these photos with brief narratives, telling the stories of Rosenwald schools’ connections to the Trail of Tears, the Great Migration, the Tuskegee Airmen, embezzlement, murder, and more. Its foreword is by the late Congressman John Lewis, a Rosenwald school alum. A traveling exhibition of this work will premiere at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta on May 22.

Rosenwald and Washington built one of earliest collaborations between Jews and African Americans. It was a foundational alliance that pressages Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. marching arm in arm with Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, who said of the experience, “It felt like my feet were praying.” And it pressages the partnership witnessed earlier this year as Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock crisscrossed Georgia together and became my state’s first Jewish and first African American members of the United States Senate.

Julius Rosenwald – Noble Hill School, Bartow County, Georgia

Julius Rosenwald, working in the garment trade, became a supplier of men’s suits to Sears, then a nascent catalog retailer. In 1895, Rosenwald joined with his brother-in-law, Aaron Nussbaum, to buy out Alvah Roebuck. Nussbaum would later exit the business, and eventually Rosenwald would buy out Richard Sears. Rosenwald led the company from 1908 until his death in 1932.

Rosenwald’s new and exceptional wealth enabled him to become one of the earliest and greatest philanthropists in American history. The vast bulk of his wealth he dedicated to what he called the “uplift” of African Americans. Rosenwald felt a deep affection for America as a haven from antisemitism. He saw that haven weakened by the country’s ongoing treatment of Blacks. Once asked why he was doing so much to support African Americans, he said “I am interested in America. I do not see how America can go ahead if part of its people are left behind.”

Booker T. Washington – Grey Columns, Residence of Tuskegee University President

Booker T. Washington was one of the most prominent African American voices of his time; his memoir, Up from Slavery, remains in print today. Julius Rosenwald read Up from Slavery in 1910 and was impressed with Washington’s drive and passion for education. Mutual friends recommended Rosenwald to Washington as a potential board member for Tuskegee.

The two men met in Chicago in 1911, and the next year Rosenwald did, indeed, join Tuskegee’s board. The two also began a lengthy correspondence about how they might collaborate further and soon focused on schools for Black children. As Washington wrote to Rosenwald, “There is nothing just now more needed in the education of the colored people than the matter of small school-houses and I am very anxious that the matter be thoroughly planned for and well worked out.” In 1912, Washington and Rosenwald launched their school-building initiative.

Emory School - Hale County, Alabama, c.1915-1962

The Emory School, in Hale County, Ala., is likely the oldest surviving Rosenwald school, built around 1915. The schoolhouse illustrates the progressive design features that were central to the Rosenwald program.

Large double-hung windows let in lots of light, since most schools initially lacked electricity. Cloakrooms served to keep muddy outdoor garments separate from the learning spaces. The two classrooms were separated by a movable partition— a series of doors—that could be retracted so that the full space could be used as a community center outside school hours.

These features were first expressed by a team of Tuskegee architects led by Robert Robinson Taylor, the first African American to attend the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the first accredited African American architect. Taylor was the great-grandfather of President Barack Obama’s adviser Valerie Jarrett.

John Lewis – Civil Rights Leader, U.S. Congressman, Rosenwald School Former Student

Lewis, who chaired the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in the 1960s and later became a long-serving congressman from Georgia, was one of many civil rights icons who attended a Rosenwald School (Dunn’s Chapel, in Alabama). Medgar Evers, a Rosenwald school student, became Mississippi field secretary for the NAACP. He was later murdered for his activism. Poet and writer Maya Angelou became the northern coordinator for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. She would later write about her days in an Arkansas Rosenwald school in her memoir, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

Thousands of others became teachers, preachers, farmers, tradespeople, and businesspeople––the backbone of a new African American middle class.

Lincoln School – Bledsoe County, Tennessee, 1926-1965

Decorative pressed tin covers the walls and ceilings of the Lincoln School, an illustration of the pride the Black community had in their schoolhouse.

The Rosenwald schools program was innovative and sophisticated. Rosenwald essentially provided challenge grants, requiring the local Black communities to contribute to construction. Some contributed cash, others land, materials and labor. The local (white) school board had to agree to own, maintain, and staff these public schools.

In the early years of the program, contributions from the black community and Rosenwald played an outsized role. That shifted in part because Rosenwald’s contributions leveraged nonpublic dollars and thus made public funding more politically palatable. But another powerful driver of white support was the Great Migration. Faced with losing the labor force, the white community gathered the political will to provide more public money for Black schools.

Charles Albert & Ernie Tyson – Educators, Civic Leaders, Rosenwald School Former Students and Teachers

Charles Albert and Ernie Tyson were classmates at Peck High which served Nassau County, Florida, from 1927 to 1969. After graduating in 1949. Tyson went to college and became a teacher. Albert joined the army and spent several years deployed to Japan.

Reconnecting after his return, and at Tyson’s insistence, Albert went to college. He, too, became a teacher. Tyson taught first grade at Peck and at other places; Albert taught chemistry and biology, first at Peck and then at other schools. And Albert went into politics, eventually becoming mayor of Fernandina, the first African American to hold that post since Reconstruction.

Peck High closed in 1969 and sat abandoned for decades, until Albert led the fight to save the building. Today the facility houses a Head Start program, municipal offices, and offices of not-for-profits. And in her old fourth-grade classroom, Tyson runs a children’s library, a position she originated and has held for two decades. Students becoming teachers become the keepers of the flame of history and memory.

Pleasant Plains School - Hertford County, North Carolina, 1920-1950

One of the core principles of Rosenwald schools was modest design. Such humility was in part to control costs and in part to avoid provoking a backlash, specifically arson, from the local white citizenry.

Cupolas were especially anathema, for they were seen by some at the Rosenwald Fund as derivative of church architecture and thus a violation of the separation of church and state.

But despite being offered architectural plans and design guidelines, Black communities often adjusted designs in an expression of agency. At Pleasant Plains, the community wanted a cupola, and they built a cupola.

Ellie J. Dahmer, widow of the slain civil rights leader Vernon Dahmer, at the Bay Springs School in Mississippi

Vernon Dahmer attended the Bay Springs School in Forrest County, Mississippi, which served from 1925 to 1958. He became the head of the NAACP in Forrest County, and when the school closed, Dahmer turned the building into a center for civil-rights activism. He was later murdered by the Ku Klux Klan.

Ellie Dahmer also attended a Rosenwald school, one in Jasper County, Mississippi. She began a long education career as a teacher at Bay Springs. The schoolhouse was recently restored by the Dahmers’ son Dennis. It now again serves as a community center.

Andrew Feiler is the photographer and author of “A Better Life for Their Children: Julius Rosenwald, Booker T. Washington, and the 4,978 Schools that Changed America,” which was just published by the University of Georgia Press. An exhibition of these photographs opens May 22 at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta.

A message from our CEO & publisher Rachel Fishman Feddersen

I hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning, nonprofit journalism during this critical time.

We’ve set a goal to raise $260,000 by December 31. That’s an ambitious goal, but one that will give us the resources we need to invest in the high quality news, opinion, analysis and cultural coverage that isn’t available anywhere else.

If you feel inspired to make an impact, now is the time to give something back. Join us as a member at your most generous level.

—  Rachel Fishman Feddersen, Publisher and CEO

With your support, we’ll be ready for whatever 2025 brings.

Republish This Story

Please read before republishing

We’re happy to make this story available to republish for free, unless it originated with JTA, Haaretz or another publication (as indicated on the article) and as long as you follow our guidelines. You must credit the Forward, retain our pixel and preserve our canonical link in Google search.  See our full guidelines for more information, and this guide for detail about canonical URLs.

To republish, copy the HTML by clicking on the yellow button to the right; it includes our tracking pixel, all paragraph styles and hyperlinks, the author byline and credit to the Forward. It does not include images; to avoid copyright violations, you must add them manually, following our guidelines. Please email us at editorial@forward.com, subject line “republish,” with any questions or to let us know what stories you’re picking up.

We don't support Internet Explorer

Please use Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Edge to view this site.

Exit mobile version