Boydton Academic and Bible Institute explained
Boydton Academic and Bible Institute was a Christian school for African Americans from 1879 to 1935 in Boydton, Virginia. It was established on the site of the Boydton Race Course where the original campus of Randolph–Macon College was built and operated from 1830 until 1868 when it was relocated to Ashland.[1] It is part of the Civil Rights in Education Heritage Trail.[2] [3] [4]
Charles Cullis acquired the former Randolph-Macon campus in 1878 to establish the school.[5] Vernon Johns attended the school. The American Folklife Center has five interviews related to the school and its history.[6]
The University of Michigan has a collection of photographs taken at the school.[7]
Alumni
- Molonket Ole Sempele, Kenyan chief, missionary, and educator[8]
- Vernon Johns
- Mozella Jordan Price, Supervisor of Appomattox County Negro Schools from 1919 to 1963.[9] [10]
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Boydton Academic and Bible Institute Historical Marker. www.hmdb.org.
- Web site: Boydton Academic and Bible Institute | Virginia's Crossroads. vacrossroads.com.
- Web site: Out and About: Boydton. Lea Beazley. Correspondent. Lake Gaston Gazette-Observer.
- Web site: Helping Preserve Historic African American Schools. February 10, 2021. Preservation Virginia.
- Web site: Old Boydton Institute (Randolph-Macon College). June 18, 2018. SAH ARCHIPEDIA.
- Web site: Randolph-Macon College/Boynton Institute heritage project - The Civil Rights History Project: Survey of Collections and Repositories (The American Folklife Center, Library of Congress). www.loc.gov.
- Web site: Boydton Institute Photos.
- Web site: Kenyan Family Makes Pilgrimage to the Boydton Institute. The News Progress.
- Web site: Winonah Camp / Mozella Price Home Historical Marker. www.hmdb.org.
- Web site: Carver-Price Legacy Museum - The Civil Rights History Project: Survey of Collections and Repositories (The American Folklife Center, Library of Congress). www.loc.gov.