Rosenwald Junior College, located in Panama City, Florida, opened its doors in 1958. It was one of eleven black junior colleges founded in the late 1950s at the initiative of the Florida Legislature. Since racial integration in schools was prohibited by the Florida Constitution of 1885 then in effect, the Legislature wished to avoid the integration mandated in the unanimous Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision of 1954 by demonstrating that a "separate but equal" higher education system existed in Florida for African Americans.
Type | Junior college |
---|---|
Active | 1958 | –1966
Location | , , U.S. |
Like most of the new junior colleges, it met at first in the facilities of a black high school, in this case Rosenwald High School, a Rosenwald School at 624 Bay Street (now Avenue).[1] The school was named for Julius Rosenwald, a Jewish philanthropist who funded many schools for blacks in the Southern United States.[2] The current Rosenwald High School, at 924 Bay Avenue, has no connection with the former high school other than the name. Calvin Washington, principal of the high school, was appointed president.[3] In 1963, Washington became full-time president of the college.[4] According to him, "we never really had adequate facilities, nor did we have the kind of seed money we needed to get full-time faculty."[5] The college got its own classroom building in 1962.
Initial enrollment was 27.[6] Another source gives the original enrollment as 35, "much lower than the 125 expected."[7] The peak enrollment at the college, in 1964-65, was 177.[8]
The college was merged with the previously all-white Gulf Coast Junior College, now Gulf Coast State College, in 1966. According to Ivie Burch, an administrator, "There was no transition, just closure of Rosenwald."[9] When the college was merged, only one faculty member obtained a job at GCJC.[10] Gulf Coast contains a Rosenwald Junior College Classroom Building, which has no relation to the former facilities of Rosenwald, several miles away. In 2014, Gulf Coast Community College launched the Rosenwald Junior College Center for Social Change and Inclusion.[11]
See also
editFurther reading
edit- Allison Marie Riggle, "Rosenwald Junior College: place matters in a school community", Doctor of Education Dissertation, University of West Florida, 2009.
- Falcon, Rosenwald's yearbook, 1966. Only one issue published. http://gulfcoast.sobek.ufl.edu/GCSC000861, retrieved April 21, 2016.
References
edit- ^ Florida Division of Historic Resources, "The Rosenwald School of Panama City", http://www.visitflorida.com/en-us/articles/2008/july/944-the-rosenwald-school-of-panama-city.html, retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ^ Russell Booker, "The Rosenwald Schools: An Impressive Legacy of Black-Jewish Collaboration for Negro Education", America's Black Holocaust Museum, "America's Black Holocaust Museum | the Rosenwald Schools: An Impressive Legacy of Black-Jewish Collaboration for Negro Education". Archived from the original on 2013-06-15. Retrieved 2016-03-02., retrieved April 21, 2016.
- ^ Walter L. Smith, The Magnificent Twelve: Florida's Black Junior Colleges, Winter Park, Florida, FOUR-G Publishers, 1994, ISBN 1885066015, p. 101.
- ^ Smith, p. 105.
- ^ Smith, p. 102.
- ^ Unidentified clipping, probably the News Herald, mistakenly dated 1958, Gulf Coast Community College archives, http://gulfcoast.sobek.ufl.edu/GCSC000859/00001, retrieved April 22, 2016.
- ^ Kevin M. McCarthy, African American Sites in Florida, Pineapple Press, 2007, ISBN 1561643858, p. 12.
- ^ Smith, p. 111.
- ^ Ivie Burch, an administrator at Rosenwald, quoted in Smith, p. 120
- ^ Smith, p. 109.
- ^ Zack McDonald, "Museum to display history of Rosenwald Junior College," News Herald (Panama City, Florida), February 13, 2014, http://m.newsherald.com/article/20140213/news/302139975, retrieved April 21, 2016.