The Place of Education in
African American History and Culture
The Eighth Annual Conference of the
Triangle African American History Colloquium
February 28th and March 1st, 2014
UNC-Chapel Hill
Schedule
Friday, February 28
8:00-8:30: Breakfast
8:30-8:45: Opening Remarks(University Room)
Jerma Jackson, Associate Professor of History, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
9:00-11:00: Session 1 (Concurrent Panels)
Black Education and Community Control (University Room)
Building New Communities: Black Town Development and Contested Geographies of Education and Housing in the Missouri Delta, 1940-1954
Heidi Dodson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Extending Education: Local Conflict over Public School Finance in a Cotton Belt County, 1980-1986
Will Goldsmith, Duke University
“Movers of the World”: The Free Thought Movement and the New Negro Radicalism in Harlem
Brady Burton, Clark University
Comment: Sarah Thuesen, Guilford College
Teaching African Americans and African American History in the Late-Nineteenth and Early-Twentieth Centuries (Incubator Room)
Which Shall We Choose?: An Analysis of the Educational Philosophies of Anna Julia Cooper and Charlotte Hawkins Brown
ShaVonte’ Mills, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
“For the Better Education of our Girls”: The Educational Philosophy of Hallie Q. Brown
Daleah Goodwin, University of Georgia
Comment: Walter Jackson, North Carolina State University
11:00-12:30: Lunch (on your own)
12:30-2:30: Session 2 (Concurrent Panels)
Black Parents’ Educational Activism in the Long Black Freedom Movement (University Room)
The Politics of Preschool Education: Black Parents, White Supremacists, and the Child Development Group of Mississippi
Crystal R. Sanders, Pennsylvania State University
On the Other Side of Brown: The 1947 Browne School Parent Boycott for Educational Equity in D.C.
Tikia K. Hamilton, Princeton University
Comment: Katherine MellenCharron, North Carolina State University
Religion, Abolitionism, and Educational Institutions (Incubator Room)
“To Drink of the Healing Stream”: Oberlin College and the Fight to End Slavery and Inequality in Antebellum America
J. Brent Morris, University of South Carolina-Beaufort
Hardshell Schooling: Calvinist Education Among Black Primitive Baptists in Hunstville, Alabama, 1863-1907
Joshua Guthman, Berea College
Theological Education and the Promise of Freedom in Virginia, 1875-1882
Nicole Myers Turner, University of Pennsylvania
Comment: John M. Giggie, The University of Alabama
2:45-4:45: Session 3 (Concurrent Panels)
The Process of Desegregation and its Aftermath: What is Lost and What is Gained? (University Room)
We Made Lemonade from Lemons: The Story of Little River High School, 1935-1995
Kali Love, North Carolina Central University
Losing Lincoln: How Brown v. Board of Education Undermined Black Educators
Kathryn Palmer, Florida State University
“To the Point of Absurdity”: The Failure to Integrate the Inglewood, California Public Schools in the 1960s-1970s
Jennifer Mandel, Mount Washington College
“Growing Pains”: Integration at a Southern Segregation Academy
Monica Blair, University of Georgia
Comment: David Cecelski, Independent Scholar
Educating Black Women for a Variety of Roles in the Early Twentieth Century (Incubator Room)
“You See How Black I Am….Don’t Call me Aunt!”: “Mammies,” “Aunts,” and Domestic Workers in Twentieth Century America
Elizabeth Wilkins, College of Charleston
“A Door of Opportunity” for a Separate Medical Career: The Education of African American Medical Students at the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, 1920-1925
Vanessa Northington Gamble and Gillian T. Maguire, The George Washington University
Black Women, Education, and Racial Uplift: Re-examining the White Rose Home’s Role in Educating Black Women Migrants in New York City during the New Negro Movement
Natasha Cochran, Clark University
Comment: Cheryl Hicks, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
5:00: Keynote Address
Pleasants Family Assembly Room, Wilson Library
“The Black Revolution on Campus: Transformation of Higher Education”
MarthaBiondi, Chair of African American Studies and Professor of African American Studies and History, Northwestern University
Introduced by James Leloudis, Professor of History, Associate Dean for Honors,
and Director of the James M. Johnston Center for Academic Excellence, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
A catered reception with heavy hors d’oeuvres will follow in the library lobby
Saturday, March 1
8:00-8:30: Breakfast
8:30-10:30: Session 4 (Concurrent Panels)
Black Activist-Educators from the New Negro Movement to Civil Rights (University Room)
Tossing Stones at an Ivory Tower: The New Negro Radical Educational Theory and Praxis of Hubert Harrison
Ousmane Power-Greene, Clark University
Continuity, Rupture, and Alternative Visions in Boston’s Struggle for Educational Equality
Daniel McClure, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
“It Was Like Putting a Diaper on a Gnat”: Kathleen Crosby, VilmaLeake, Bertha Maxwell-Roddey, Black Women Educators and Desegregation in Charlotte in the 1960s-1990s
Sonya Ramsey, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Comment: Noelle Morrissette, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Education for Citizenship in the Pre- and Post-Emancipation South (Incubator Room)
Thinking Resistance: Forging a Free Black Literary Community in Antebellum Charleston
Lindsey Batchman, University of Colorado-Boulder
A Long Hard Struggle: Black Mobilians’ Struggle for Education, Citizenship, and Freedom, 1865-1868
Hilary Green, Elizabeth City State University
A Tripartite Inquiry: African Americans’ Pursuit of Education in Late-Nineteenth Century Memphis and Rural West Tennessee, 1862-1897
Elizabeth Baddour, University of Memphis
Comment: Kabria Baumgartner, The College of Wooster
10:45-12:45: Session 5 (Concurrent Panels)
Public and Digital Histories of African American Schools and Communities (University Room)
Exploring Children’s Literature, Memory, and Microhistory
Benjamin Filene, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Digital History: Documenting and Mapping Tennessee’s African American Schools
Ken Middleton, Middle Tennessee State University
Massive Resistance to Massive Reconciliation: Finding Common Ground in the Preservation of R.R. Moton High in Prince Edward County, Virginia
DwanaWaugh, North Carolina A&T State University
Comment: W. Fitzhugh Brundage, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Black Student Activism and the Long Freedom Struggle (Incubator Room)
Race Women: New Negro Politics and the Flowering of Radicalism at Bennett College, 1900-1940
Jelani Favors, Duke University
The Radical Roots of Diversity at the University of Michigan
Matthew Johnson, Texas Tech University
“I Fought in the Wrong War”: The Vietnam War, Student Rhetoric and the Rise of Black Power at North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Lauren Mottle, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Comment: William Sturkey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
1:00-2:45: Session 6 (lunch provided)
Plenary on the State of African American Studies and the Study of African American History (University Room)
Carlton Wilson, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences, North Carolina Central
University
Adriane Lentz-Smith, Associate Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies,
Department of History, Duke University
Dwana Waugh, Assistant Professor and History Education Coordinator,
Department of History, North Carolina A&T State University
Moderated by Martha Biondi, Chair of African American Studies and Professor of
African American Studies and History, Northwestern University
3:00-5:00: Session 7 (Concurrent Panels)
Radical Pedagogical Visions in African American Education (University Room)
Disentangling Black Women’s Studies, Black Studies, and Women’s Studies: The
Case for a Higher Synthesis
Amber Tucker, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Unbinding the Books: Jailhouse Lawyers and the Fight for Law Libraries in North
Carolina’s Prisons
Amanda Hughett, Duke University
Comment: Dana Thompson Dorsey, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Is Separate Inherently Unequal? Student Empowerment in Private and Community Schools (Incubator Room)
On Franklin Road: Students of Color and Alternative Visions of Citizenship, Community, and Education
Ruthie Yow, Yale University
When Schools Disappear: Howalton Day School and Black Private Education in
Post-World War II Chicago
Worth Kamili Hayes, Tuskegee University
Boycotts and Shutdowns: Black Student Activism, Racial Violence, and
Reconciliation in San Francisco Bay Area Public Schools, 1966-1970
Aaron Fountain, Winthrop University
Comment: Charles Bolton, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
5:00-5:30: Closing Comments and Presentation of the Best Paper Prize, Sponsored by the Institute of African American Research (University Room)