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"Education Among the Freedman,"
c. 1864.
(Library of Congress)
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Image 15 of 21
Published
by the Pennsylvania Freedmen's Relief Association, this broadside is illustrated
with a picture of "Sea-island School, No 1--St. Helena Island [South
Carolina], Established April, 1862."
May 1863
letters from teachers at St. Helena Island describe their young students
as "the prettiest little things you ever saw, with solemn little
faces, and eyes like stars." Vacations seemed a hardship to these
students, who were so anxious to improve their reading and writing that
they begged not to "be punished so again." Voluntary contributions
from various organizations aided fourteen hundred teachers in providing
literacy and vocational education for 150,000 freedmen.
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