the history
Exerpted from Black College Football - 100 Years of History, Education and Pride by Michael Hurd
In sports, Walter Camp selected his
first All-American team in 1889, and in 1891 Dr. James A. Naismith nailed a
peach basket to a gymnasium wall and the “winter pastime” of basketball was
born. In 1887, the first all black baseball team, Chicago's Union Giants, was
formed.
Yet, despite the giddiness of so much
progress, the United States also suffered sobering defeats and setbacks in the
reality of social change. The century's run was grounded in divisive confusion.
The Civil War came to a halt and so did slavery, leaving the nation's
consciousness stunned (especially in the South), like a blindsided quarterback
left reeling by a blitzing linebacker, though freedom did not immediately bode well
for black Americans. In 1891, one hundred twelve lynchings were reported in the United States,
with the majority occurring in the South. Blacks were the primary victims. Four years before the
century turned, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the doctrine of “separate but
equal” in Plessy v. Ferguson, paving the way for legalized racial segregation
in all walks of American life. But race relations already had taken a decided
turn for the worse in 1857 when the Court struck a massive blow to anti-slavery
forces with the Dred Scott decision. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice
Roger B. Taney asserted that the Declaration of Independence was never intended
to include rights for Negroes.
Four years later, the Civil War began
and raged until 1865.
Congress had chosen to solve the
problem with the “red man” by forcing him into isolation on reservations and
now the business was what to do about the black man, the newly-freed black man,
numbering over 4 million and unbound from his reservations, Southern
plantations. The signing of the Emancipation Proclamation in September 1862 and
the ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment in December 1865 eliminated
slavery, but there was no real hope that “the problem of the color line” would
go away any time soon. The Civil War battlefields were quiet, but the fight
had changed face, assuming a multitude of ugly disguises including physical and
psychological acts of racial intimidation by whites against blacks.
However, despite this climate,
historically black colleges emerged to serve an ample supply of eager students,
most illiterate former slaves looking to become mainstream and productive
citizens.
“Their interest in education was as though an entire race was trying to go to school,” said Dr. Russell Adams, chairman of the African-American Studies Department at Howard University. “The desire to learn was strong.”
Education has great catch-up speed,
and if the newly freed slaves were to make up so much lost ground, learning
would propel them to greater levels of assimilation and empowerment. Education
had been so staunchly denied blacks in the Deep South that there were laws
(“codes”) against slaves learning to read. So it is not surprising that the
region is where most black colleges are located. Unlike some Northern schools,
which admitted a few blacks, admission to a white Southern college was not even
a remote consideration for black aspiring students.
Members of
religious groups (Presbyterian, African Methodist Episcopal Zion, et.al.) were
among many of the early black college founders. However, some schools initially
opened their doors through the financial aid of private individuals,
philanthropic groups, or state legislative acts. The Land Grant Act of 1890
required states to fund black colleges in order to receive federal money for
white agricultural and mechanical schools.
“Many of the schools started with no money,” Adams said. “The first wave of colleges was the group that was to create the beginning of the literate black middle class and become models for the class below. The desire to learn was strong.”
Some black colleges were designated “normal” schools whose specific task was training elementary and secondary school teachers. Most of the early black colleges focused on basic skills, reading and writing, but some of the schools also emphasized religion, vocational, and agricultural courses. Some schools began in one-room structures, perhaps a very small house or barn, accommodating fewer than ten students, ranging from elementary grades through college. In fact, into the new century, it was not unusual that a black “college” also had a “high school” component. Often, homeowners offered space in their homes for classes, with faculty members supported by a philanthropist. Atlanta University opened in 1865, conducting its first classes in an abandoned railroad boxcar. However, W.E.B. DuBois has called the founding of Lincoln University in Missouri the “most romantic beginning for all black colleges.” The soldiers and officers of the 62nd U.S. Colored Infantry are credited with the founding of Lincoln for giving $5,000 toward the school's incorporation. Very few, if any, of the men actually ever attended the school. Their concern was more that black children get an education. Lincoln’s first class was held on September 14, 1866, in an old, dilapidated schoolhouse with a leaky roof. There were only two students that first day and, of course, it rained and a nearby creek flooded. Though a bit soggy, the pupils survived their first foray into formal education and a flood of students began streaming to the school.
The American Missionary Association refocused its efforts from Africa to helping newly freed slaves by supplying financial aid to start schools in the South. Fisk, in Nashville, was among the schools it helped to found, opening in January 1866 in what had been an Army barracks used to house black cholera victims. Fisk started with 500 students enrolling in the first week but within three months the school had 3,000 students.
“Fisk was not a classic university,” explained Dr. Reavis Mitchell of the Fisk history department. “Some of the people had no education at all. People were learning to read, learning the alphabet and math, but there were no requirements other than to just show up. They were basic educations, but they moved rapidly. You could go from first to sixth grade in a year and a half to two years.”
Come
one. Come all. Come learn.
Humble beginnings, to say the least. Now, there are 103* historically black colleges and universities (HBCU) ** with a combined enrollment of almost 275,000 students in 1999. Black colleges represent only three percent of all U.S. colleges, yet 30 percent of all bachelor’s degrees and 15 percent of all master’s degrees awarded to African Americans are from black colleges.
Pennsylvania's Cheyney State, founded in 1837, is considered the oldest historically black college and one of only three such schools in existence prior to the Civil War. Lincoln (Pennsylvania) and Wilberforce (Ohio) Universities are the other two, founded in 1854 and 1856. Wilberforce was the first co-educational college for blacks.
“Black colleges perpetuate what the
heritage is about,” said Paul Collins, a graduate of Livingstone College and a
retired professor of sociology at California State University at Hayward, and
also a former standout basketball and football coach at Wiley College in Texas.
“What you are, or are not, will be enhanced in that situation. Those kinds of
relationships are not available at bigger colleges. You can't get involved with
anybody like you.”
Collins also offers one explanation
of why many black colleges have often been in dire financial straits: A desire
to educate as many blacks as possible, regardless of the students' ability to
pay tuition.
“If you showed any
promise as a student, you were not pushed out of school,” Collins said.
“Schools went bankrupt because they would give so many kids education for free.
But how could you turn a kid away if he wanted an education? Black colleges
are about educating people.
“Black colleges are about graduating!”
* There are conflicting methods of counting HBCUs. Some statisticians also include junior colleges and community colleges in urban centers and whose enrollments are predominantly black. By that count, HBCU’s number over 200.
** Accredited HBCUs are defined by the Dept. of Education as: “Degree-granting institutions established prior to 1964 with the principal mission of educating black Americans.”