“Building a Bright Future: Black Communities and Rosenwald Schools in Tennessee,” presented in partnership with Fisk University’s John Hope and Aurelia E. Franklin Library is a community-focused exhibition highlighting the work of alumni, descendants, and organizations to preserve the legacies of Rosenwald Schools across the state.
Manassas High School in Shelby County is one of the schools featured in the new exhibit.
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Manassas High Memories
What are commonly referred to as Rosenwald Schools were the result of an initial partnership between Sears, Roebuck, and Co. president Julius Rosenwald, Tuskegee Institute president Booker T. Washington, and Black Communities throughout the South. Between 1912-1937, that partnership resulted in the construction of almost 5,000 schools for Black children across 15 southern states, including 354 in Tennessee. Rosenwald schools drove improvement in Black educational attainment and helped educate the generation who became leaders of the Civil Rights movement.
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Manassas High Band
“Building a Bright Future: Black Communities and Rosenwald Schools in Tennessee” leads the visitor through the development of Rosenwald Schools and their legacies by first tracing the history of education for Black Tennesseans beginning with the Reconstruction period. It explores early partnerships between churches, schools, and agencies like the Freedmen’s Bureau, and the work of Black leaders, residents, parents, and teachers to improve educational opportunities for Black students.
Partnering with The John Hope and Aurelia E. Franklin Library at Fisk University was essential to developing the exhibit.
We knew in order for such an exhibit to be successful, we would need to start by reaching out to and familiarizing ourselves with the previous work done by organizations who had already been preserving and telling the histories of these schools,” says Matthew Gailani, lead curator of the exhibition.
Fisk University librarian Arnaud “Arna” Wendell Bontemps acquired the Julius Rosenwald Fund Archives on behalf of the university in 1948. The collection documents the history of the Rosenwald Fund, including the school building program. It is now preserved by the John Hope and Aurelia E. Franklin Library, Special Collections & Archives.
“Our teams at Fisk University John Hope and Aurelia E. Franklin Library and the Forging Future Pathways Forward: Building a Portal to Rosenwald Collections for all at Fisk University project were thrilled to partner and collaborate with Tennessee State Museum,” says DeLisa M. Harris, director of Library Services at Fisk University. “This exhibit is the first major showcase of the impact and legacy of the Julius Rosenwald Fund Rural School program in Tennessee.”
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The Library and Museum teams traveled across the state, making stops in all three Grand Divisions and connecting with many Rosenwald School communities, meeting with Rosenwald School alumni and descendants who shared their stories and experiences. The 4,000 square foot exhibit is a culmination of those visits, together with personal alumni and educator accounts, in an effort to highlight 16 of the more than 350 Rosenwald communities in Tennessee.
It truly has been a privilege to work on this exhibit over the past year,” says Gailani. “In particular, the generosity of alumni and community leaders in sharing their histories and memories has been a very humbling experience. We hope that this exhibit will help act as a platform for communities across the state to tell their stories and highlight the importance of Rosenwald Schools not only in Tennessee’s past but to its present and future as well."
The Tennessee State Museum exists to procure, preserve, exhibit, and interpret objects relating to the social, political, economic, and cultural history of Tennessee and Tennesseans, and is celebrating its 86th anniversary in 2023. Through six permanent exhibitions titled Natural History, First Peoples, Forging a Nation, The Civil War and Reconstruction, Change and Challenge and Tennessee Transforms, the Museum takes visitors on a journey — through artifacts, films, interactive displays, events and educational and digital programing — from the state’s geological beginnings to the present day. Additional temporary exhibitions explore significant periods and individuals in history, along with art and cultural movements.
The “Building a Bright Future: Black Communities and Rosenwald Schools in Tennessee” exhibit runs until February 25, 2024. For more information and list of schools, communities, and Grand Divisions represented in the show, visit Tennessee State Museum.