Rev. Galen Weaver (American Missionary Association)
All you blacks do is lie and run the drug trade on streets throughout the entire USA, "we blacks weren't allowed an education" is just a BIG LAZY BLACK LIE, a cruel nigger HOAX on the White communities.
Rosenberg Schools set up 5,357 total. Now this:
amistad-finding-aids.tulane.edu
heavily snipped
The American Missionary Association was established in 1846 by a network of nineteenth century abolitionists who met at the Second Convention on Bible Missions. Some of them had previously united in the legal defense of the Amistad captives in 1839.
During the U.S. Civil War, the Association began founding schools for the freedmen and
went on to found hundreds of schools for African Americans, as well as other minority groups and Appalachian Whites.
By 1866, American Missionary Association officials realized that normal or grammar schools and colleges to
train African American teachers would be the most effective use of their resources, and within three years they had chartered seven institutions for higher learning: Berea College, in Kentucky; Fisk University, in Tennessee; Atlanta University, in Georgia; Hampton Institute, in Virginia; Talladega College, in Alabama; Tougaloo University, in Mississippi; Straight University, now known as Dillard, in Louisiana. The curriculums of these schools were modeled after the better Northern schools of the time, combining academic and industrial courses.
The American Missionary Association also aided in the establishment of Howard University and contributed the entire support for its theological department. Fourteen non-chartered normal and high schools had been opened by 1876.
By 1879, 150,000 pupils in the South were being taught by graduates of American Missionary Association normal schools and colleges. And by 1888, the Association' schools had educated 7,000 teachers. In addition to training teachers, these schools had two other purposes. They were to demonstrate conclusively that African Americans were capable of mastering higher education and they were to provide African American leaders who might assist their people in the struggle for equal rights.
...
At this point, the American Missionary Association was absorbed again, into the United Church Board for Homeland Ministries, and became a part of the Division of Higher Education and the American Missionary Association. This organizational restructuring was the result of a further merger between the Congregation and Christian Churches, and the Evangelical and German Reformed Churches. Other prominent officers in the campus ministry efforts of the Division were Hartland H. Helmich, Verlyn Barker, Rev. William K. Laurie, Rev. Paul H. Sherry, and Robert Mayo. In addition, Herman H. Long and
Rev. Galen Weaver headed the Association's projects concerning race relations;
For all of that? Readers might not like it, but the following thread is the reality of blacks in schools after 2004.
ALSO...
Baltimore City is facing a devastating reality as the latest round of state test scores are released.Project Baltimore analyzed the results and found a shocking
foxbaltimore.com
and
Multiple Baltimore high schools changed more than 12,500 failing grades to passing over a several-year span, according to the findings of an audit released Tuesday by the Maryland Office of the Inspector General for Education.
www.cbsnews.com
874