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Booker T. Washington School

Gainesville, Cooke County

Marker Text

In 1880, two years before the City of Gainesville created a public school system for all its children, Island Sparks, a young mulatto, taught the Black children of the city. In 1886, the city built a frame school building on this site for the community's Black youth. Originally known as the Gainesville Colored School, the school adopted the name Booker T. Washington sometime before 1927. The original two-story facility was replaced in 1939 with a red brick, WPA project structure. Desegregation in 1965-66 resulted in the closing of Booker T. Washington as a Black institution. Texas Sesquicentennial 1836-1986

Marker Details

Address 701 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave.
Location Description Martin Luther King Jr. Ave, north side between Mill and Culbertson streets.
Marker # 453
Dedicated 1986
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code African American topics; educational topics
Latitude, Longitude 33.629638, -97.151035

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