Talladega College
360 pages, 5 9/10 x 8 9/10
Paperback
Release Date:29 Sep 2003
ISBN:9780817350666
CA$49.95 Back Order
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Talladega College

The First Century

University of Alabama Press
An early history of Talladega College
 
In 1954 when the U.S. Supreme Court declared separate education inherently unequal, Talladega College was a notable black liberal arts school thriving in rural east Alabama. This is a study of that college, its growth, development, and significance, from its inception by freed slaves in the 1860s through the student protest movement more than a century later. Initially Talladega offered primary, secondary, nursing, and theological as well as college-level work. Under strong leadership of visionaries such as James T. Cater, the school’s first black dean, Talladega became a first-rate liberal arts institution. During its first decades the school struggled against poverty, white hostility, Ku Klux Klan threats, and internal dissension to produce a number of teachers and ministers for Alabama schools and churches.
 
This book examines such college issues as finance, enrollment, students, educational policy, and the often stormy relationship with black and white neighbors. It provides a sense of both the obstacles to and the positive consequences of building and nurturing a black college.
 
Maxine D. Jones is Associate Professor of History at Florida State University.
 
Joe M. Ricardson is Professor of History at Florida State University.
 
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