African American Education
Dublin Core
Title
African American Education
Collection Items
Southern Union State Community College Diploma
Diploma for n associates degree in Office Management awarded to Linda Day Saxon from Southern Union State Community College class of 2017
Southern Union State Community College Diploma
Associates diploma in Child Development from Southern Union State Community College for Linda Day Saxon Class of 2002
Southern Union State Community College Diploma
Graduation diploma for Linda Day Saxon from Southern Union State Community College
Opelika State Technical College Diploma
Linda Day Saxon's college graduation diploma for the Class of 1986
Drake High School Class of 1960 Renuion
Newspaper clipping accounting the Class of 1960 reunion's attendants and former teachers
Drake Highschool Class of 1963 Reunion Dance Invitation
Drake Highschool Class of 1963 Reunion Dance Invitation
Boykin Street Elementary School
Auburn's first public elementary school that serviced only African-American students was founded in 1951, when it also briefly functioned as a junior high school. Boykin Street Elementary remained the institution for Auburn’s African-American…
Auburn High School
In 1931, the institution that would come to be known as Auburn High School opened on Samford Avenue at the site of present-day Samford Middle School. From 1931 to 1959, the institution was known as Lee County High School. Until 1966, the entire…
J.F. Drake High School
Auburn’s last exclusively African-American public high school was founded in 1957. J.F. Drake High School was named after Dr. Joseph Fanning Drake, and Auburn native who went on to become the president of Alabama A&M College in Huntsville. In 1968,…
Lee County Training School
One of the largest Rosenwald schools erected in Alabama, the ten-room Lee County Training School served first- through twelfth-grade African-American students in the Auburn area starting in 1928. Lee County Training School became the first black…