Segregated Schools

Before the Civil War, most southern states provided no formal education for African American deaf students. After the war, during the period known as Reconstruction, the federal government began to force social changes in the South. In 1868, North Carolina created a "Colored Department" alongside the main state school for deaf students. Other southern states soon followed, creating separate schools or departments.

Black male students standing in front of the Kentucky School for the Deaf

Kentucky School for the Deaf c. 1884

Black female deaf students with white teachers, in front of the Kentucky School for the Deaf

Kentucky School for the Deaf c. 1889 - 1890

Black boys and girls, along with Black and white adults, in front of the Kentucky School for the Deaf

Black and white students were taught on the same campus at the Kentucky School for the Deaf, but they had separate classrooms and dormitories.

Kentucky School for the Deaf c. May 1920