Howard Academy

Howard Academy

Howard Academy, at 306 NW 7th Avenue in Ocala, Florida, was a school for African-American children opened in 1866[1] or 1867[2]:40 by the Freedmen's Bureau. Up until that time there had been no public and almost no private education for African Americans in Florida; education for slaves was prohibited by law (see Anti-literacy laws in the United States) and free blacks were made to feel unwelcome and encouraged to leave the state.

James H. Howard, a former slave owner, donated land on the corner of Osceola and Third streets.[1] Financial support and the teachers came from the North.[3] "By 1880, Howard Academy was run by African American teachers."[3][1] [We] were the beneficiaries of very well-educated, very dedicated, and very strong teachers [who couldn’t get jobs elsewhere]".[2]:43 Howard got hand-me-down textbooks from Ocala High.[2]:40

For many years, Howard Academy was one of the outstanding black schools in the state. "The emphasis at Howard High School was on academics.... "They used what I call the Greco-Roman model; you succeed academically and you succeed athletically"....[2]:43 It was one of two schools in the state of Florida that awarded high school diplomas to African-Americans.[2]:46 (The other was Lincoln High School, in Tallahassee.)

Howard Academy was destroyed by fire in 1887 and a new school was built a year later at the corner of Adams and Bay, now Northwest Second Street and Northwest Seventh Avenue.[1] Howard became a high school in 1927. In 1935, the building was badly damaged by fire and had to be torn down. A new brick building was built a year later, near the site of the old building.[1]

The high school at Howard Academy closed in 1955, when the students were moved to Howard High School, which is now Howard Middle School. That was still more than 10 years before county schools were integrated. The school building is currently the Howard Academy Community Center, and houses the Black History Museum of Marion County.

Notable alumni

  • H.W. Chandler, elected state senator in 1880.
  • Dr. June Gary Hopps, Thomas M. “Jim” Parham Professor of Family and Children’s Studies, University of Georgia. Attended Spelman College; helped organize the Atlanta Student Movement and arrested while participating in the first sit-ins and boycotts.
  • Dr. Ollie Gary Christian.[2]:42–43
  • Dr. Gladys Gary Vaughn, special assistant to the assistant secretary for civil rights at the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
  • Dr. Faye Gary, Professor of Nursing, holds [2015] an endowed chair at Case Western Reserve University.[2]:42
  • Loretta Pompey Jenkins, elementary school principal and President of the Marion County branch of the NAACP.[2]:44
  • Dr. Effie Carrie Mitchell Hampton, the first African-American woman to become a doctor in Florida, [2]:44 She was married to another doctor and Howard graduate, Dr. Hampton. She operated a pharmacy.[1]
  • Dr. Lee Royal Hampton, the first black dentist in Ocala.[2]:50
  • Dr. R. S. Hughes, who established the American National Thrift Association Hospital to serve the African-American community in Marion and other surrounding counties.
  • Jesse McCrary, Florida’s first African-American Secretary of State

Further reading

  • Black Historical Organization of Marion County (1977). The Struggle for Survival: A Partial History of the Negroes of Marion County, 1865 to 1976. Ocala.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Bryant, Monica (February 12, 2006). "Howard Academy was Ocala's First black school". Ocala Star-Banner. Retrieved June 2, 2018.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Vickers, Lu; Wilson-Graham, Cynthia (2015). Remembering Paradise Park : tourism and segregation at Silver Springs. University Press of Florida. ISBN 0813061520.
  3. 1 2 "West Ocala History". City of Ocala. Retrieved June 2, 2018.

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