Marceline Lincoln School: Black Education History and Importance During Segregation, Part 2
Marceline Lincoln School, located at 201 Wells Avenue in Marceline, Linn County, Missouri. was erected in 1933 by Floyd Newman, a local builder, after Marceline voters approved a bond request to build a new “negro school”[1] after the previous one burned down. While Marceline does not have official records or relics of the Black community in the city, like most rural cities they don’t have the resources larger cities have to preserve such history, newspaper articles did frequently discuss issues in the Black community, particularly issues revolving around the education of non-white children in their community.
This building was the sole K-8 educational facility in Marceline for non-white students between 1933-1954 (the year the school was built until desegregation began and the school closed). Students who extended their education into high school had to travel to The Dalton School in Dalton, Missouri (27 miles south of Marceline) to obtain their high school education.
The architect is unknown, but it was most likely Newman who drew up the vernacular plans. After the Marceline School Board sold the property in 1955 at the start of school desegregation which resulted from the decision in the case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, KS, various owners used the building for such things as a storage area, an antique store, and now a carpenter’s workshop.[2]
In 1866, Missouri school districts were, as the law states, “required to establish within their respective jurisdictions one or more separate schools for colored children when the whole number of by enumeration exceeds twenty.”[3] Marceline’s government disregarded this law. The school was erected, despite not having met this threshold for the two years prior to being approved by a city-wide vote. Rarely did enrollment increase very much beyond 20 students. In fact, it had an historically low attendance rate, falling several times well below that threshold; yet the city never closed it down.
Marceline started integrating their high school during the 1953-1954 school year (before the Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka decision.[4] They then integrated their elementary school during the 1955-1956 school year.[5]
As the last extant resource representative of education for the Black community during the era of segregation in Marceline, the Lincoln School is locally significant under Criterion A: ETHNIC HERITAGE – BLACK and EDUCATION and eligible for the National Register of Historic Places.[6]
AFRICAN AMERICAN EDUCATION IN MISSOURI
Missouri, a former slave state, like most states, faced hardships concerning the education of people of color. As Lori Bogle notes, citing Julius Hunter: “’Missouri has been a mirror reflection of the nation as it displayed its confusion, indifference, guilt, cruelty, pride, subterfuge, embarrassment, benevolence, and sympathy in handling the issues of how blacks should and would be treated’.” She agrees with Hunter, stating “The state has not always responded to national issues in a traditional way [and] maintains an identity distinct from her southern sisters” because most slave owners owned few slaves and as a result, “a closer relationship between black and white often existed.”[7]
Between at least 1847 and up to the start of the property’s period of significance (1930-1954), there was considerable debate regarding the education of African Americans in the state. For example, 1847 Missouri law stated, “no person shall keep or teach any school for the instruction of negroes or mulattoes, in reading or writing, in this State [and violators] shall be punished by fine not exceeding $500, or by imprisonment … or by both.”[8] However, as seen below many individuals of different races argued that this was something that needed to change.
While the Emancipation Proclamation was issued in 1863, it did not equate to full acceptance and equality in any aspect of life, let alone education. In 1866, Missouri school districts were, as the law states, “required to establish within their respective jurisdictions one or more separate schools for colored children when the whole number of by enumeration exceeds twenty.”[9]
Three years later, the debate about the education of non-white children began to pick up steam, as evidenced by the words of Richard B. Foster, the founder of Lincoln University in Missouri. Foster argued the education of “colored children ‘of educable age’ was inadequate” as were the schools these children attended when compared to the schools for white students.[10] He stated “we may well accept that the colored schools of this State are mostly in poor condition; too few in number, little thought of, little cared for” and thus, the State is not doing its duty to these children.[11] He ends his speech by calling for more funds to be used in giving Black students of the time more access to education and to make it more equitable. Foster’s words were not heeded. In 1875, the Constitution of the Missouri State contained a statement that read: “Separate free schools shall be established for the education of children of African descent.”[12]
In 1920, The Journal of Negro History reprinted one of the most complete histories of the development of the black public school system in Missouri;[13] the article spans the decade between 1865 (the year of the end of slavery) and 1875.[14] The history outlined in the Journal establishes that it was more commonplace between 1865 and 1875 than thought for Missouri slaves to have some rudimentary education. Many were taught how to read and write by their owners; this meant that many slave owners violated the rules against the education of slaves.[15]
In 1931, W. Sherman Savage[16] expounded on the state of education for black children, writing that the 1865 Missouri constitution was explicit in how Black education was to be supported in the state, particularly that the legislature made it the duty of the school boards in the respective towns to establish one or more separate schools for Negro youth. The legislature made it mandatory upon the townships to establish schools for Negro children.[17]
The constitution at this time declares that it was “the duty of the State to provide education for the Negro as it did for the other citizens of the State”; this law mandated local school boards to establish “one or more separate schools” for non-white students and prohibited the making of false statements claiming to have created such educational facilities.[18]
Precious little seemed to have changed in Missouri since the state’s 1875 ruling of separate schools for white and Black students until 1954 when Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka overturned segregation.[19] Even then, the three-step desegregation program (which started with desegregation in junior and teacher’s colleges, followed by high schools and adult education programs, and finally technical and elementary schools) would not be fully implemented in some communities because no formal timeline was given for integration.[20] Furthermore, there tended to be a “de facto segregation in the cities, there [was] a great deal of voluntary racial separation in schools that have a racial mixture.”[21] It wasn’t until 15 years after Brown that Missouri courts gave “the duty to terminate dual school systems and start operating under a unitary system at once [to the local Board of Education].”[22]
However, this was not the case in Marceline. Marceline did not take the 3-step approach or wait 15 years for desegregation to be formalized in Missouri; instead, after Brown, the city swiftly terminated the dual school system, began high school integration immediately, and closed the school the following year (1955), moving all students into their previous whites-only schools.
AFRICAN AMERICAN EDUCATION IN MARCELINE
Up until the opening of the Lincoln School in 1933, Marceline had been following the letter of the law for the most part. There was a two-year period during which the children did not have a formal schoolhouse; after their school burned down classes for non-white students in the Baptist Church for two years until the Lincoln School was built.[23]
After Emancipation, Black children were allowed to get an education; since Marceline was not yet a city in 1863, there was no known school. However, one early Marceline account states that the Black children had a school in a carpenter’s shop in the 1890s, roughly two years after Marceline was incorporated.[24] One year later, the “colored school” was mentioned in a short piece about Marceline schools.[25] Within the context of Black education in Marceline, the school received almost yearly recognition in news articles.
Additionally, Marceline began desegregating its high school in 1953,[26] a year prior to Brown. This move illustrates the attitude the city government, citizens and school board all had: That the law must be followed.
MARCELINE’S AFRICAN AMERICAN POPULATION
During the period of significance, Marceline’s African American population shifted dramatically.
In the 1930 Census,[27] the population looked like this:
- Ward 1: 1 family; 5 people
- Ward 2: 4 families; 12 people
- Ward 3: 12 families; 59 people
- Ward 4: 2 Black families; 6 people – 3 Mexican families; 18 people
(90 total non-white residents)
By the 1940 Census[28] the demographics had changed significantly:
- Ward 1: 0
- Ward 2: 4 families; 14 people
- Ward 3: 8 families; 22 people
- Ward 4: 5 Families; 41 people
(77 total non-white residents)
This trend continued in the 1950 Census:[29]
- Ward 1-2: 0
- Ward 3: 3 Black families listed, totaling 27 people. There were 2 families labeled “B2” with 11 people.
- Ward 4: 2 Black families with 10 people; 3 Mexican families with 16 people
(53 total non-white residents)
While the school would be placed in Ward 3 because that Ward housed most of the African American population at the time, the Census shows that African American families were reasonably spread out in Marceline. In fact, when the Mexican families are added to the total, nearly half of the non-white population lives outside of Ward 3.
That diversity shifted significantly between the 1930 and 1940 Census’. Marceline saw a loss of 13 non-white residents during this decade. Additionally, Ward 1 lost the one family that lived there, while Ward 2 maintained its population. Wards 3 and 4 saw the largest changes in population with Ward 3 losing 63% of its non-white population, while Ward 4 became the new center of the non-white community with a 58.5% increase in non-white residents.
The trend of losing non-white families continued over the next decade too, with Marceline losing 24 more non-white residents. By this time, no African American families resided in Wards 1 and 2, Wards 3 and 4 split the non-white population with 27 and 26 individuals respectively.
[1] “Work Started on the Negro School.” The Marceline News. 15 July 1932, XLV.41.
[2] Skinner, Adam. Personal Interview. 2 June 2023.
[3] Laws of Missouri, 1866, p. 177, Sec. 20 as cited in Henderson, p. 1.
[4] Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Opinion; May 17, 1954; Records of the Supreme Court
of the United States; Record Group 267; National Archives.
[5] Marceline: The Magic City: Centennial Edition, Marceline, Missouri. City of Marceline. 1988. This also seems to
contradict a report from the Marceline Board of Education that refers to integration being complete in 1954, but it may have started in 1953 and ended in 1954. See AFRICAN AMERICAN EDUCATION IN MARCELINE below.
[6] This is noted in both “Architectural/Historic Inventory Form.” Marceline Survey. Commissioned by Missouri
Department of Natural Resources, State Historic Preservation Office. April 2018. Survey No. LI-AS-001-037. [Marked “Individually Eligible], and “Architectural Survey of Marceline (MO.): Final Report.” Marceline Survey. Commissioned by Missouri Department of Natural Resources, State Historic Preservation Office. April 2018. Survey No. LI-AS-001-037.
[7] Bogle, Lori. “Desegregation in a Border State: The Example of Joplin, Missouri.” Missouri History Review. 85.4,
- 442+.
[8] Laws of Missouri, 1816-1847, p. 103, cited in Henderson, David. “Integration of Missouri Public Schools Faculty
and Students Twenty Years After Brown.” Missouri Commission on Human Rights. Department of Consumer Affairs, Regulation and Licensing. October 1974, p. 1.
[9] Laws of Missouri, 1866, p. 177, Sec. 20 as cited in Henderson, p. 1.
[10] “Some Aspects of Black Education in Reconstruction Missouri: An Address by Richard B. Foster.” The Curators
of the University of Missouri, U of Missouri P: Columbia, Missouri, 1984. 85.4, p. 19.
[11] Ibid., p. 21.
[12] Missouri Constitution, 1875, Art. XI, Sec. 3 as cited in Henderson, p. 1.
[13] Williams, Henry S. “The Development of the Negro Public School System in Missouri: The Period from 1865 to
1875.” The Journal of Negro History. Apr. 1920, V.2, pp. 137-165.
[14] Ibid, p. 138.
[15] Ibid, p. 144.
[16] In 1934, Savage became the first African American to be awarded a Ph.D. from Ohio State University in History
by a predominately white university. He was a college History professor and author.
[17] Savage, W. Sherman. “The Legal Provisions of Negro Schools in Missouri from 1865 to 1890.” The Journal of
Negro History. July 1931, 16.3, pp. 309-321.
[18]Ibid, p. 310.
[19] Brown.
[20] Henderson, p. 45.
[21] Ibid, p. 58.
[22] Alexander v. Holmes County Board of Education, 396 U.S. 19 (1969).
[23] These classes were held in the “black Baptist Church.” However, no research has turned up indicating the location
of this church within the city limits. The 1930 Sanborn Fire Insurance map shows the Baptist Church on
Ritchie as the only Baptist Church within the city limits. That building is not the Black church referenced.
[24] Because no other carpenter shops show on the 1894 Sanborn Fire Insurance maps, the shop located on the
southeast corner of Lake and Kansas (one block south of the downtown business district) is most likely the “school” referenced at the corner of Lake and Kansas (one block south of the downtown business district).
[25] “The Schools.” The Marceline Mirror, 3 September 1891.
[26] Franklin, Melia K. School and Community, Community and School: A Case Study of a Rural Missouri Setting.
Dissertation. U of Nebraska, May 2011, p. 111.
[27] “1930 Census: Volume 3. Population, Reports by States: Mississippi and Missouri.” U.S. Census
Bureau. https://www.census.gov/library/publications/1932/dec/1930a-vol-03-population.html. Accessed 1 September 2023.
[28] 1940 Census Enumeration District Maps – Missouri – Linn County – Marceline – ED 58-20, ED
58-21, ED 58-22, ED 58-23. National Archives. https://catalog.archives.gov/id/5833471Accessed 15 December 2023.
[29] 1950 Census Enumeration District Maps – Missouri (MO) – Linn County – Marceline – ED 58-28
to 32. https://catalog.archives.gov/id/18559828 National Archives. Accessed 15 December 2023.