BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 2
Edwards, Twenty-Five Years in the Black Belt, 10–11.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 3
Donald P. Stone, Fallen Prince: William James Edwards, Black Education and the Quest for Afro-American Nationality (Snow Hill, AL: Snow Hill Press, 1990), 50–51, 60, 123.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 4
Edwards, Twenty-Five Years in the Black Belt, 32.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 5
Stone, Fallen Prince, 126.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 6
Edwards, Twenty-Five Years in the Black Belt, 32.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 7
Stone, Fallen Prince, 127.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 8
Letter from Booker T. Washington to William Howard Taft, from the Tuskegee Institute, May 29, 1907, The Booker T. Washington Papers, Volume 9, 1906–1908, eds. Louis R. Harland and Raymond W. Smock (Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1980), 281.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 9
J. H. Dillard, Fourteen Years of the Jeanes Fund, 1909–1923, South Atlantic Quarterly XXII, no. 3 (July 1923): 195.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 10
Linda B. Pincham, “A League of Willing Workers: The Impact of Northern Philanthropy, Virginia Estelle Randolph and the Jeanes Teachers in Early Twentieth-Century Virginia,” Journal of Negro Education 74, no. 2 (Spring 2005): 117.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 11
Benjamin Brawley, Doctor Dillard of the Jeanes Fund (Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press, 1971), 57–58.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 12
Pincham, “A League of Willing Workers,” 117.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 13
Lance G. E. Jones, The Jeanes Teacher in the United States, 1908–1933 (Durham: University of North Carolina Press, 1937), 62.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 14
Mildred Williams et al., The Jeanes Story: A Chapter in the History of American Education, 1908–1968 (Jackson, MS: Jackson State University, 1979), 196–98.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 15
Jackson Davis, Jeanes Visiting Teachers (New York: Carnegie Corp. of New York, 1936), 13–18.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 16
Brawley, Doctor Dillard of the Jeanes Fund, 7.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 17
Williams, The Jeanes Story, 81.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 18
Williams, The Jeanes Story, 86.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 19
Sixteen: Julius Rosenwald, Illinois, 1862
Peter M. Ascoli, Julius Rosenwald: The Man Who Built Sears, Roebuck and Advanced the Cause of Black Education in the American South (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2015), 2.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 1
“Julius Rosenwald,” Lincoln Home, National Historic Site, https://www.nps.gov/liho/learn/historyculture/julius-rosenwald.htm, updated October 8, 2023.
BACK TO NOTE REFERENCE 2