Anadarko Rosenwald School
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuesterMark
N 31° 55.725 W 094° 52.528
15R E 322701 N 3534073
This post-mounted subject marker stands next to turnout in front of a low stone wall with an empty field beyond.
Waymark Code: WM11WFD
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 12/28/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 8

Marker erected by the Texas Historical Commission.

Texas Historical Commission Atlas data:
Index Entry Anadarko Rosenwald School
Address 13406 FM 1662 W
City Laneville vicinity
County Rusk
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 322637
UTM Northing 3534048
Subject Codes African American topics; buildings; Christian denomination; educational topics; segregation, Jim Crow
Marker Year 2015
Marker Number: 18325

Marker Text:

In 1868, former slaves of Julien Devereaux's Monte Verdi plantation settled the surrounding community of Anadarko (Anadarco). Land for the church and community was provided by descendants of the Devereaux family. Church records indicate that in 1868 newly freed African Americans led by Reverend Green Lewis and his wife, Phoebe Devereaux, established the Anadarko Christian Church. The first public school for African Americans was held in the Anadarko Christian Church.

In 1917, Julius Rosenwald, president of Sears, Roebuck and Company, and Booker T. Washington established the Rosenwald Fund to assist in the foundation of schools for African Americans in the South. With money from the Rosenwald Fund ($900), public donations ($2,100) and private contributions from students and parents ($600), the Anadarko Colored "Rosenwald" School was built in 1926. The building was a three-teacher school typical of the rural schools built by the Rosenwald Foundation.

Over the years, the name of the school changed several times to Laneville Colored School to Allen High School (named for U. E. Allen, former principal) prior to merging with the Laneville Independent School District. The old classrooms were moved to expand the campus during the years 1967-69 to accommodate additional students after integration. The only remnant of this historic Rosenwald School is the pier and beam foundation where the gymnasium was erected. The building may no longer function but the memory of the first public school in the area will live on as an important reminder of early African American educational efforts.

(2016)
Marker is Property of the State of Texas


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