[The Education Of The Negro Prior To 1861 by Carter Godwin Woodson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Education Of The Negro Prior To 1861 CHAPTER V 7/46
142.] Outside of the city of New York, not so much interest was shown in the education of Negroes as in the States which had a larger colored population.[1] Those who were scattered through the State were allowed to attend white schools, which did not "meet their special needs."[2] In the metropolis, where the blacks constituted one-tenth of the inhabitants in 1800, however, the mental improvement of the dark race could not be neglected.
The liberalism of the revolutionary era led to the organization in New York of the "Society for Promoting the Manumission of Slaves and Protecting such of them as have been or may be liberated." This Society ushered in a new day for the free persons of color of that city in organizing in 1787 the New York African Free School.[3] Among those interested in this organization and its enterprises were Melancthon Smith, John Bleecker, James Cogswell, Jacob Seaman, White Matlock, Matthew Clarkson, Nathaniel Lawrence, and John Murray, Jr.[4] The school opened in 1790 with Cornelius Davis as a teacher of forty pupils.
In 1791 a lady was employed to instruct the girls in needle-work.[5] The expected advantage of this industrial training was soon realized. [Footnote 1: La Rochefoucauld-Liancourt, _Travels_, etc., p.
233.] [Footnote 2: _Am.
Conv._, 1798, p.
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