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Lincoln Normal School

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Built
  
1937

Designated ARLH
  
February 19, 1988

Area
  
400 m²

Added to NRHP
  
13 February 1990

NRHP Reference #
  
88003243

Opened
  
1937

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Lincoln Normal School httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
Lincoln Ave. and Lee St., Marion, Alabama

Headquarters
  
Marion, Alabama, United States

Similar
  
Henry House, First Congregational Church of, Marion Courthouse Square H, Siloam Baptist Church, Kenworthy Hall

The Lincoln Normal School, also known as the Lincoln School was a historic African American school in Marion, Alabama. Its roots went back to a Union soldier who remained in Marion after the end of the Civil War to teach newly freed African Americans. His efforts proved successful and in 1867 the school was incorporated with the support of African Americans from the surrounding Perry County. In 1868, school trustees sought the assistance of the American Missionary Association (AMA) for help with day-to-day operation of the school. The AMA supplied teachers and financial support.

Contents

Teacher Training

In 1870, the school expanded to include teacher training and for a time became known as the Lincoln Normal University for Teachers. The program primarily focused on training African American high school graduates to become teachers. In 1885, Lincoln School was voted the top school for freed slaves in the south. In 1887 fire destroyed many of the campus buildings. As a result, the teacher training function was relocated to Montgomery where it became Alabama State University.

Faculty

The school was led by several principals, most notably Miss Mary Elizabeth Phillips. During her tenure from 1896 to 1927 both the campus and student body expanded. In 1939, alumni and friends constructed Phillips Memorial Auditorium in her honor.

Other notable faculty included Cecil and Fran Thomas who were instrumental in establishing a choral program at the school. Under their direction, choirs from the school toured across the Southeast and Midwest.

Legacy and Reputation

Lincoln School became well known for graduating a high proportion of students who went on to attain advanced degrees, a remarkable achievement for any school but more particularly for a segregated high school in rural Alabama.

The school closed in 1970, when it was consolidated with the newly built and racially integrated Marion High School. One of the few buildings remaining on the campus site is the Phillips Memorial Auditorium, now on the National Register of Historic Places and the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage. The Lincoln High School Gymnasium was also added to the Alabama Register on February 29, 2005.

Notable alumni

  • Coretta Scott King, civil rights activist and wife of Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Edythe Scott Bagley, educator, and civil rights activist
  • William R. Pettiford, Birmingham minister and banker
  • Jean Childs, wife of civil rights activist Andrew Young
  • Odith Thelma Patton, mother of Bishop T. D. Jakes
  • Additional reading

  • Lincoln Normal School tribute site
  • Bailey, Richard. Neither Carpetbaggers Nor Scalawags: Black Officeholders during the Reconstruction of Alabama 1867–1878.
  • Childs, Idella J. (1976) "Lincoln Normal School"
  • History of the Baptists in Perry County
  • Lincoln Normal School Scrapbooks, 1910s-1920s, The A. S. Williams III Americana Collection, University Libraries Division of Special Collections, The University of Alabama (digitized content)
  • References

    Lincoln Normal School Wikipedia