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Missionary Schools
The Vernacular In Indian
Schools This question is not settled.
One thing that has kept it unsettled has
been the uncertain use of the term
"missionary schools" in the Orders of the
Indian Department. What is precisely a
missionary school? Let me try to explain.
There are three kinds of schools in the
nomenclature of the Indian Office, based on
the sources of their support.
-
Government Schools,
supported wholly by Government
appropriations—such as those at Carlisle,
Genoa, etc. These may be left out of the
account in this discussion, for no one
objects to the Government's directing the
studies in them.
-
Contract Schools, so called
because the missionary societies which
sustain them receive under contract with the
Government a certain amount of money in aid
of their support. The school at Santee,
Nebraska, and the school at Yankton, Dakota,
are specimens of this class. But these are
mission schools, for the societies which
support them would not continue to do so for
a day except for their missionary character;
and yet these schools are classed by the
Department not as missionary but as contract
schools.
-
Missionary Schools, which
are supported wholly by missionary funds,
the Government contributing nothing. Here,
again, in the recent order, the Department
employs the confusing use of terms, speaking
in general terms of "missionary schools,"
and then of missionary schools under the
charge of "native Indian teachers," and at
remote points; the inference being that the
white teacher of a missionary school, though
it may be in a place so remote that neither
the pupils nor the people can understand the
English language, cannot teach in the
vernacular.
With these explanations we
present, under date of Feb. 11, 1888.
Our Schools And The Yellow
Fever
We have been extremely gratified with the
manifestations of faith and courage on the
part of our lady teachers in the South
during the time of fear and panic because of
the yellow fever. Some were already at their
stations and in their schools, and some were
on the way, subject to the trials of
quarantine. Not one hesitated in the path of
duty. Many teachers from the different parts
of the North were ready to go when the
reports of the pestilence were most
alarming, but not one of the teachers who
had previously been in [pg 301] the work,
failed to await instructions to go forward
whenever we should speak the word. We have
been grateful to God during all these days
of the autumn for the splendid qualities of
consecration and courage which have come out
of our correspondence with our honored
teachers. Never did their fathers or
brothers, years ago, when deadly war called
them to face the perils of battle, show
higher courage or a larger sense of duty.
Almost all of our Southern schools are now
in session, and begin with increased
attendance.
School Echo.—A teacher writes: "One of my
pupils who had been teaching during the
summer came to me in despair over a sum,
saying: "I can't understand sympathizing
fractions."
(When we went to school years and years ago,
"sympathizing fractions," meant broken
candy. We understood, but the teacher
didn't. Times change, and we change with
them.)
Our
Schools Our missionary
work has been largely in schools. It was
God's providence. But these were always
missionary centers.
Their number at the present time is
ninety-three; seventeen of these in the
Southern States are Normal Schools from
which a large proportion of the pupils go
forth as teachers. It is computed that of
the 15,000 Negro teachers in the South
instructing 800,000 pupils, 13,500 became
teachers from missionary schools, and that a
great army of more than 7,000 of these
teachers received their education in the
institutions of the American Missionary
Association. Thus the faith of the churches
multiplies and accelerates itself.
These Normal Schools are located in
Wilmington, N.C., Charleston And Greenwood,
S.C., Atlanta, Macon, Savannah, Thomasville
And McIntosh, Ga., Mobile, Athens And
Marion, Ala., Memphis, Jonesboro, Grand View
And Pleasant Hill, Tenn., Lexington And
Williamsburg, Ky., to which must be added
the large Normal and Industrial School at
Santee Agency, Nebraska, the Oahe Industrial
School and the Fort Berthold Industrial
School, both in Dakota, and all three for
the Indians, making altogether 20. The
Association provides also the entire
teaching force at the Ramona Indian School
at Santa Fé, New Mexico. To these Normal
Schools, we may add the six normal
departments in our colleges with their
superior normal instruction. From nearly all
of these, strong appeals for enlargement
have come to meet the demands of a healthy
growth. We have cut, trimmed and denied,
with a resolution that has been painful both
in the office and in the field, and yet the
growth is upon us. Without pushing our work,
it is pushing us.
While ignorant millions need the truth and
knowledge which we have, and there are
resources in the hands of the disciples of
Christ enough for this vast and increasingly
urgent work, the necessity of denying the
provisions for the development of success
becomes well-nigh oppressive.
At Pleasant Hill,
Tenn., an important centre in our Mountain
work, we have now, in addition to the new
church, a school building unequalled in that
region. A second building for a dormitory
and boarding hall is nearly completed.
The Grand View
Academy in the Mountain region, has also
increased its school accommodations, and the
look forward is to a large institution with
far-reaching influence in the valley of the
Cumberland and on the plateau. If we are to
hold this region, we must take possession
now.
We have also reassumed charge of a school at
Beaufort, N.C. The people are already
appealing to us in the accents of their own
sacrifices for its immediate enlargement.
Providentially, and without our
solicitation, a generous giver, of Brooklyn,
N.Y., who had already added to many large
benevolences in the South, the fine building
known as Ballard Hall and the excellent
shops for industrial training at Tougaloo,
made a proffer of $11,500 to erect at Macon,
Ga., a school building of brick, capable of
accommodating six hundred pupils. This
successful school had grown until it had
taken possession of the church building for
school purposes. This noble gift, bestowed
after a personal inspection on the part of
Mr. Ballard, and upon personal conviction of
its immediate necessity, could not be
refused, and the substantial and spacious
building, with its furnishings, is now
nearly ready for occupancy. It will call for
increased contributions from the churches.
Dorchester
Academy, at McIntosh, Ga., is in a rice
region remote from civilization and
educational privileges, among thousands of
Negro people very ignorant and poor. It
cannot receive the pupils who beg for
admission. Children are punctual at school
from a distance of eight miles, lest they
shall lose their privileges by tardiness or
absence. Africa itself could scarcely send
out a cry of greater need. We had decided to
increase the capacity of this school, but
are compelled to wait.
At Greenwood,
S.C., the interests are so great and the
appeals were so reasonable, that it was
voted to enlarge the facilities for the
growing institution; but at the last we
could not do this, and the laborers there
continue their prayers and their hopes.
The Lincoln
Normal Institute at Marion, Ala., was
established in the year 1868, by the A.M.A.
In the year 1874, the State of Alabama asked
to assume the school, which had won a good
name, and to increase its facilities for the
education of the Negro. This was done. Last
year, the work was deserted by the State and
came anew into our hands. This, also, is an
enlargement upon our schedule of work.
At Lexington, Ky.,
our Normal School has grown to such a degree
that even the vestibules and halls of our
insufficient building were crowded with
eager pupils. Teachers were teaching, and
pupils were studying, in conditions [pg 306]
that none but missionary teachers would
accept. For lack of room, industrial
training has been impossible. The locality,
meanwhile, has been surrounded by saloons,
and houses that are worse. A benevolent lady
who became acquainted with these facts
offered $2,000 to purchase four acres of
land for school and industrial purposes, and
to give money sufficient for a new brick
edifice with eight large school-rooms and
all needful appointments and furnishings;
the gift amounting to $15,000.
We believe that we were not wrong in
accepting this trust in your behalf, even
though it means more teachers and increased
expenditures. We are confident that your
Christian faith would not decline this
Christian benevolence. Hence the plans for
Chandler School are in the hands of the
builders. Could some like-minded wealthy
steward of the grace of God visit
Williamsburg, Ky., in our Mountain White
work, we might be compelled to face another
such dilemma.
At Meridian,
Miss., where Christian parents have besought
us for years, past to open a missionary
school, through which their children might
be saved to morality and integrity of
character during the formative periods of
their lives, we have at last seen our way to
answer their pathetic appeal in part. A day
school with an industrial department is
ready for the opening, the building having
been constructed during the months of
summer. For valuable aid in sympathy,
counsel and influence in Meridian, we and
the people to whom we are sent are greatly
indebted to Rev. Wm. Hayne Leavell, of
Meridian.
Whitney Hall,
for the Indian boys at Santee Agency, is
another noble gift of large Christian faith
for our Normal School in Nebraska. We
summoned our courage to take this, also,
with what the enlargement includes.
These are the chief additions to our system
of schools, though there have been less
marked enlargements in other places. They
are simply the growths of strong faith and
strong life. They are the free and special
gifts which came to us through the
convictions of others who had realized the
need.
The common schools, 35 in number, in eight
different Southern States, are in the hands
of faithful teachers.
There are six Chartered Institutions, behind
which we have stood the year past.
Talladega College
in Talladega, Ala., has had a year of
exceptional interest. The college work is
developing and the theological school was
never better. The industrial departments in
agriculture and the mechanic arts offer fine
advantages. The institution increases in
popular favor and is full of students.
Atlanta University in Georgia, under the
temporary presidency of Prof. Francis, who
was also college preacher and pastor, has
moved on in its usual course. Through the
successful solicitation of Prof. Bumstead,
with our cordial and constant endorsement,
sufficient Christian money came into the
treasury to meet the deficiency caused by
the withdrawal of $8,000 from the State of
Georgia. The Association was able in its
grants to share in this satisfactory result.
At the last meeting of the Trustees, Prof.
Bumstead was elected President for the
ensuing year, and Prof. Chase, in view of a
removal to New Mexico, resigned the
professorship which he had ably held many
years.
Straight
University at New Orleans, located in
the most influential city of the Southwest,
draws its students from refined Creole homes
and from the rude cabins of the remote
plantations. An interesting report gathered
from twenty-two of its students who taught
school during the summer vacation, tells us
that they instructed 1,398 pupils in day
schools and organized thirteen
Sunday-schools, in which were taught 1,574
children, most of whom were absolutely
unreached before. This summer record of
Straight University students is a partial
illustration of what is going forth from it
year by year; and not from Straight only,
but from all of our higher schools. The
theological work in Straight is of
incalculable importance.
Tillotson
Institute, at Austin, Texas, has
invigorated its normal course and has
inaugurated a hopeful college preparatory
department. The recipient of a special gift,
it was enabled to complete a new industrial
building, in which has begun a course of
industrial training. It greatly needs a
second dormitory hall for young women, and
were not the institution so remote, some
prophetic giver would see the urgency and
the strategy of such a gift, and would make
it. If, without the sight, some one shall be
led to do this for Tillotson, he will reap
the blessing of those who do not see and yet
believe.
Tougaloo
University, near Jackson, Miss., is an
institution of exceeding interest. It has a
department of Biblical instruction added to
its course of study, in which students are
prepared to preach the gospel. Its
industrial facilities are excellent, both
for agricultural and mechanical training.
The students can take the timber from the
tree, and the iron in the rough, and make
wagons and carriages sufficiently good to
compete with the best makers in the State.
The school in all of its parts is controlled
by the missionary spirit. Rev. F.G.
Woodworth, of Connecticut, last year assumed
the Presidency.
Fisk University,
at Nashville, Tenn., is one of the oldest
and most complete of all our Southern
colleges, and has no superior among all the
institutions in the country devoted to the
education of the Negro. Giving relatively
less attention to the industries, it models
itself after our Northern colleges, and
emulates them in the rigor of its
intellectual studies and in the thoroughness
with which it seeks to make good teachers
and preachers; educators in the larger way
for the race. It also has a department of
theology. It has made its place, which it
holds with enthusiasm and fidelity. If some
one would give us, or leave us, money to
endow this institution, he could scarcely
send his influence further down the
centuries than in this way. It would tell
upon the race and upon the Nation.
In this glance at our schools, we see
Christian schools. But they are more, they
are missionary schools. We are bearing the
torch of Christ into places of darkness. We
teach the industries to them because they
can be made tributary to the salvation of
the people. They are the leaves of the tree
of life, and the leaves of the tree are for
the healing of the people.
We may not close this review of our school
system without remembering those
institutions now standing alone; great
Hampton, in whose rich gifts we rejoice, and
Berea, another child of the A.M.A., now
grown to strength.
To Howard University, at Washington, also,
we extend the sympathy of a common purpose,
together with such financial aid as we may
for the support of its theological course.
We point to these great institutions which
have been planted and fostered by the A.M.A.,
together with those which are still upheld
by us, with a feeling akin to that of the
renowned Cornelia when she said, "Behold my
jewels."
| Total Number of our
Schools |
South |
58 |
Indian |
18 |
76 |
| Total Number of our
Instructors |
South |
266 |
Indian |
50 |
316 |
| Total Number of our
Pupils |
South |
9,896 |
Indian |
580 |
10,476 |
| Theological Students |
South |
87 |
Indian |
|
87
|
| Law Students |
South |
73 |
Indian |
|
73 |
| College
Students |
South |
68 |
Indian |
|
68 |
| Preparatory College
Students |
South |
105 |
Indian |
|
105 |
| Normal Students |
South |
836 |
Indian |
10 |
846
|
| Grammar Grade
Students |
South |
1,996 |
Indian |
43 |
2,039 |
| Intermediate Grade
Students |
South |
2,998 |
Indian |
108 |
3,106
|
| Primary Pupils |
South |
3,831 |
Indian |
419 |
4,250 |
We have, in addition, 17
Chinese Schools on the Pacific Coast, with
39 teachers.
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materials that may imply negative stereotypes reflecting the culture or
language of a particular period or place. These items are presented as
part of the historical record and should not be interpreted to mean that
the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes implied
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American Missionary Association, 1888-1895
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