Chicot County Training School Explained

Chicot County Training School
Location:Jct. of Hazel and N. School St., Dermott, Arkansas
Coordinates:33.5356°N -91.4386°W
Architecture:Bungalow/craftsman
Added:May 26, 2004
Delisted:September 1, 2022
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:04000490

The Chicot County Training School was a historic school building at the corner of Hazel and North School Streets in Dermott, Arkansas. The single story H-shaped building was built in 1929 with funding support from the Rosenwald Fund, a major philanthropic effort to improve educational opportunities for African-Americans. The school was preceded by Dermott Baptist Industrial School, co-founded by Isaac George Bailey, and then Morris Booker High School and Memorial College.[1] It was succeeded by Morris Booker Memorial College. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. The school building collapsed and burned after being abandoned.[2] It was delisted from the National Register in 2022.

History

The building served as a public school facility until 1975, after which it was sold to Morris-Booker Memorial College, which was in 2004 using it as a Head Start facility.[3]

Architecture

The school building was similar to other schools of the period, with banks of windows providing plentiful light to its seven classrooms. Sometime in the 1940s an auditorium was added to the west side. The building was the second built for the training school with Rosenwald support; the first, a four-room building, was built in 1924 but has not survived.[3]

The school building was significant as the only surviving Rosenwald-funded school in Chicot County. Its design was based on standard plans developed by Samuel Smith, an agent for the Rosenwald Fund who developed a plan book for various configurations of school buildings, to be used in the fund's work without necessating the need for an architect for each facility built. The design incorporated an "industrial" room, in which trades could be taught, and the building was sited according to Rosenwald recommendations for the best use of natural lighting.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Pioneers: Early African-American Leaders in Pine Bluff, Arkansas: Freedmen, Newly Freed, and First/Second Generation, Born from 1833-1892. 9781480871922. Williams. Bettye J.. 22 January 2020.
  2. Web site: Legacy lost — Thousands of Rosenwald schools were built to improve education for Black students during Jim Crow era. 7 March 2021.
  3. Web site: NRHP nomination for Chicot County Training School. Arkansas Preservation. 2014-03-24.