Grand Bay Elementary School for Colored explained
The Grand Bay Elementary School for Colored, also known simply as the Grand Bay School, was a racially segregated elementary school located midway between Grand Bay, Alabama and St. Elmo, Alabama along U.S. Route 90. The school was established in 1919 with support from the residents of the surrounding community of Fernland and funding from the Julius Rosenwald Fund.[1] It was constructed on land donated for that purpose by Peter Alba, a Confederate veteran of the Civil War, who lived at Bayou La Batre, Alabama.[2] [3] [4] Of the thousands of schools constructed by the Rosenwald Fund, this school was the eleventh school so funded.[5] All that remains of the original school is a 2feetx3feetft (xft) piece of stone and mortar.[2]
See also
Notes and References
- A picture of the school is included among the official Rosenwald Fund papers housed at Fisk University. It can be seen at http://rosenwald.fisk.edu/?module=search.details&set_v=aWQ9Mzgz&school_historic_name=Grand Bay&button=Search&o=0
- Encyclopedia: Rosenwald Schools in Alabama . Abraham Aamidor . May 5, 2009 . The Encyclopedia of Alabama . Auburn University . August 15, 2011.
- Book: Gaillard, Frye . In the Path of the Storms: Bayou La Batre, Coden, and the Alabama Coast . Hagler . Sheila . Denniston . Peggy . 2008-05-15 . University of Alabama Press . 978-0-8173-5504-3 . en.
- See, Pictures in slide presentation, p.10, online at http://www.grandbay.org/Presentation.pdf
- See, Rosenwald Fund records at Fisk University, online at http://rosenwald.fisk.edu/?module=search.details&set_v=aWQ9Mzgz&school_historic_name=Grand Bay&button=Search&o=0