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  2. During the era of slavery in the United States, the education of enslaved African Americans, except for religious instruction, was discouraged, and eventually made illegal in most of the Southern states.

  3. Jun 17, 2020 · Following Nat Turner's rebellion of 1831, legislation to limit Black people's access to education intensified. But enslaved people found ways to learn. Updated: July 11, 2023 | Original: June...

    • Colette Coleman
  4. Why Can’t We Teach Slavery Right in American Schools? ‘We are committing educational malpractice’: Why slavery is mistaught — and worse — in American schools. By Nikita StewartAUG. 19, 2019.

  5. African Americans across the country understood the profound impact of segregated and inferior educational practices on Black students. Led by the NAACP’s Charles Hamilton Houston, the NAACP began mounting a legal challenge to “separate but equal” in the 1940s.

  6. For the nearly four million, mostly illiterate and recently freed African Americans, education was a crucial first step, after emancipation, to becoming self-sufficient. Learning to read was not only desirable, it was oftentimes necessary to protect freedoms, find employment, and communicate with separated family members.

  7. Jun 29, 2023 · Born in slavery in Virginia in 1856, Washington founded Tuskegee University and stressed that Blacks must rely on themselves and advance economically on farms, in factories and as craftspeople.

  8. Aug 16, 2022 · This brief passage highlights a vast system of education that enslaved communities used in order to gain the skills too often kept from them, a story worth expanding on. Education under slavery was heavily prohibited. Enslaved children and adults had to take extreme measures to gain literacy, including attending underground schools.

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