Jeanes Foundation

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Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Jeanes Foundation, also known as the Negro Rural School Fund or Jeanes Fund, helped support education and vocational programs for African American in rural communities from 1908 to the 1960s. It was founded by Anna T. Jeanes with help from Booker T. Washington in 1907.

About

The Jeanes Foundation supplied the structure and the method to hire teachers for African Americans in rural communities. Teachers in the program were called supervising industrial teachers, Jeanes supervisors, Jeanes agents, or Jeanes teachers.Template:Sfn These teachers had a broad latitude to decide what areas to focus on in their individual communities.Template:Sfn It was also understood that community needs were different and teachers' methods would vary.Template:Sfn Supervising teachers also worked to raise money for schools, school equipment and to extend the teaching year.Template:Sfn Supervising teachers were chosen by county superintendents.Template:Sfn

History

The foundation was the idea of Anna T. Jeanes, an American philanthropist and Quaker who wanted to establish a fund to improve the educational opportunities of rural African-Americans.[1] Jeanes had been in contact with Booker T. Washington of Tuskegee Institute and Hollis B. Frissell, principal of the Hampton Institute, who had discussed with her the importance of funding education for African-Americans.Template:Sfn Jeanes was interested in providing assistance for people in rural areas, saying, "I should like to help the little country schools."Template:Sfn Jeanes asked Washington to help her set up a foundation for this purpose.[1][2] Washington helped create a board of trustees for the program and Jeanes endowed the organization with $1,000,000 to create the Jeanes Foundation, also known as the Negro Rural School Fund or sometimes just Jeanes Fund which was incorporated on November 20, 1907.Template:Sfn[1][3]Template:Sfn After Jeanes died, her will specified that William Howard Taft, Andrew Carnegie, Washington and Frissell be named to the Board of Trustees for the foundation.Template:Sfn At the time, the Jeanes Foundation was the only educational foundation to have black members of the board.Template:Sfn The president of the fund was James Hardy Dillard.Template:Sfn The board first met on February 29, 1908.Template:Sfn

Soon, the board began to receive requests for funding from county superintendents of black schools.Template:Sfn Jackson Davis, the superintendent of Henrico County Public Schools near Richmond, Virginia, requested funds for an "industrial supervisor" who would teach both vocational and academic skills at rural schools.Template:Sfn[4] In 1908, Davis, named Virginia Estelle Randolph as the first "Jeanes Supervising Industrial Teacher."[4] Randolph created the first program for the Jeanes teachers to improve education in their communities.[5] As the overseer of 23 elementary schools in Henrico County, Randolph developed the first in-service training program for black teachers and worked on improving the curriculum of the schools. With the freedom to design her own agenda, she shaped industrial work and community self-help programs to meet specific needs of schools. She chronicled her progress by becoming the author of the Henrico Plan, which became a reference book for southern schools receiving assistance from the Jeanes Foundation, which became known as the Negro Rural School Fund.[2] Randolph was paid $40.00 a month for her work.Template:Sfn

The Southern Education Foundation, a not-for-profit foundation, was created in 1937 from the Negro Rural School Fund, the John F. Slater Fund, the Peabody Education Fund, and the Virginia Randolph Fund.[6]

In the 1960s, the Jeanes teachers and their students were integrated into public schools.[2] The program continued until 1968.Template:Sfn

References

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Sources

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Further reading

  • Lance G. E. Jones: The Jeanes Teacher in the United States 1908-1933. An Account Of Twenty-Five Years’ Experience In The Supervision Of Negro Rural Schools. Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill and London, 1937. Template:ISBN
  • Mildred M. Williams, Kara Vaughn Jackson: The Jeanes story: a chapter in the history of American education, 1908-1968. Jackson State University: [distributed by the University Press of Mississippi], 1979

External links