“To educate themselves”: southern black teachers in North Carolina’s schools for the freedpeople during the Civil War and reconstruction period, 1862–1875 (Pre-published version)
Citation
Brosnan, A. (2019) “To educate themselves”: southern black teachers in North Carolina’s schools for the freedpeople during the Civil War and reconstruction period, 1862–1875, American Nineteenth Century History, 20(3), 231-248, available: https://doi.org/10.1080/14664658.2019.1690743.
Brosnan, A. (2019) “To educate themselves”: southern black teachers in North Carolina’s schools for the freedpeople during the Civil War and reconstruction period, 1862–1875, American Nineteenth Century History, 20(3), 231-248, available: https://doi.org/10.1080/14664658.2019.1690743.
Abstract
Between 1862 and 1875, most of the teachers in North Carolina’s
schools for the freedpeople were black. The vast majority of these
teachers were from the South, mostly North Carolina, and many
were former slaves. Yet, for over a century, the teachers of the
freedpeople had been consistently portrayed as northern white
women. Using North Carolina as a case study, this article
examines the life and work of southern black teachers during the
Civil War and Reconstruction eras, 1862–1875. In particular, it
investigates how formerly enslaved men and women organized
and mobilized to create a sustainable system of schooling for
both themselves and their children. In doing so, this article
demonstrates that southern black men and women were not
passive recipients of northern largesse. Instead, it argues that
North Carolina’s black population played a powerful role in
shaping the contours of southern black schooling.
Keywords
FreedpeopleSchools
Education
Reconstruction
North Carolina