Vivian Malone-Jones
A Revolutionary Hero: Agrippa Hull
First Draftee of WWI: Leo A. Pinckney
Private Redder
The Murder of Henry Marrow
David Fagen
1st Lt. John W. Madison's Family
Isreal Crump, Sr.
Early American Entertainment
Napolean Bonaparte Marshall
Captain Laurence Dickson
A Tragic and Hellish Life: Private Herman Perry
Captain Jamison
George Roberts
Lt. Robert W Diez
24th Infantry Regiment Korea
Pvt. George Watson
The Return
Death of James Harrison
Robert Smalls
Eddie Carson: Father of Josephine Baker
Corporal Fred McIntyre
Jessee Clipper
Spelman Grads Class of 1892
Undeterred
An Invaluable Lesson Outside the Classroom
Garnet High School Basketball Team
A Solitary Figure
Graduates of Oberlin
Julie Hayden
Tennessee Town Kindergarten
One Little Girl
Edith Irby Jones
McIntire's Childrens Home Baseball Team
Bertha Josephine Blue
Give Me An 'A'!
We Finish to Begin
Standing Tall Amid the Glares
Segregated to the Anteroom
The 1st by 17 Years: The Story of Harry S. Murphy,…
Pedro Tovookan Parris
Enslaved No More: Wallace Turnage
Alvin Coffey
John Roy Lynch
A Loving Daughter: Nellie Arnold Plummer
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Garnet High School Students


Left to right: NoKomis Boyd, Adonia Price, Lou Wade, Frances Starks, Maude Wanzer, Ola Mitchell, Cecil Miller, Emma Wade, Irene Jackson, and Sallie Hale. [James Randall Collection, West VA Historical Society]
Garnet High School in West Virginia named after Abolitionist Henry Highland Garnett (1815 - 1882). He was a leading member of the generation of black Americans who led the abolition movement away from moral suasion to political action. Garnet himself did not stop with politics: he urged slaves to act and claim their own freedom. A constant theme throughout his life was the necessity for blacks to take their destiny into their own hands. Not only did he seek to build up black institutions, he became an advocate of colonization in the 1850s and after. He was also a firm Christian who devoted his life to ministry in the Presbyterian Church. His efforts were ably seconded by his oratorical skills which placed him in the front rank among his contemporaries.
Garnet High School in West Virginia named after Abolitionist Henry Highland Garnett (1815 - 1882). He was a leading member of the generation of black Americans who led the abolition movement away from moral suasion to political action. Garnet himself did not stop with politics: he urged slaves to act and claim their own freedom. A constant theme throughout his life was the necessity for blacks to take their destiny into their own hands. Not only did he seek to build up black institutions, he became an advocate of colonization in the 1850s and after. He was also a firm Christian who devoted his life to ministry in the Presbyterian Church. His efforts were ably seconded by his oratorical skills which placed him in the front rank among his contemporaries.
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