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Thursday, February 4, 2010

Oldest HBCU's

OLDEST HBCUs (information used from soulofamerica.com)

4-Year Public and Private Institutions


The history of Black colleges and universities dates back to 1837 when Richard Humphreys, a Quaker philanthropist from Philadelphia, started the Institute for Colored Youth to counter the prevailing practice of limiting or prohibiting the education of Blacks. Though the institute began as a high school, it began offering its first college degrees in the late 1930's. Today, that school is known as Cheyney University.

Today, 103 recognized Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) are dotted across the country in Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia, and the US Virgin Islands. Alabama has the most with 14.

1837 Cheyney University of Pennsylvania (Cheyney, PA)
1854 Lincoln University of Pennsylvania (Lincoln University, PA)
1856 Wilberforce University (Wilberforce, OH)
1857 Harris-Stowe State College (St. Louis, MO)
1862 LeMoyne-Owen College (Memphis, TN)
1865 Bowie State University (Prince Georges County, MD)

OTHER HBCU MILESTONES

1865 - Virginia Union University was founded in Richmond, Virginia.

1867 - North Carolina's Barber-Scotia College in Concord, Fayetteville State University in Fayetteville, Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte, Morgan State University in Baltimore, and St. Augustine's College in Raleigh were all founded.

1867 - MeHarry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee, has trained more than one-third of the Black physicians and dentists practicing in the U.S. today

1887 - Spelman College in Atlanta, is the nation's oldest liberal arts college for Black women

1881 - Tuskegee University was founded by Booker T. Washington in Tuskegee, Alabama

1925 - though founded as N.C. College for Negroes, N.C. Central University in Durham, North Carolina became the nation's first state-supported liberal arts college for Blacks

1944 - The United Negro College Fund incorporated to raise money and provide services for private Black colleges.

"Even schools for Negroes, then, are places where they must be convinced of their inferiority." - Dr. Carter G. Woodson

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