Within
months of the end of the Civil War the
leaders of the northern American
Missionary Association (AMA)
which was affiliated with the Congregational
churches including John Ogden, Reverend Erastus Milo Cravath, field secretary; and Reverend Edward Parmelee Smith, founded
the Fisk Free Colored School, for
the education of freedmen in Nashville, Tennessee. It
was one of several schools and colleges that the AMA which was led by ardent abolitionists helped found.
Classes
opened on January 9, 1866 with about 200 students. As word spread the enrollment quickly jumped to more than 900, a testament to the thirst for knowledge among recently freed
slaves and the all-male students
ranged in age from 16 to more than 70 years old.
The
school was named in honor of General
Clinton B. Fisk of the Tennessee
Freedmen’s Bureau, who made unused barracks
available to the school, as well as establishing the first free schools for white
and black children in Tennessee.
Later he endowed Fisk with a $30,000 which gave the school a firm early financial base that was wanting in
other newly created Freedmen’s schools.
In
response to a Reconstruction Era Tennessee
state law to support public schools—a deeply radical idea in the South, was incorporated as a Normal
School for the college training of
teachers in August 1867. The college was co-educational and James
Dallas Burrus, John Houston Burrus,
Virginia E. Walker, and America W. Robinson were the first four
students to enroll. Broughton and the
two Burruses were the first African
Americans to graduate from a liberal
arts college south of the Mason–Dixon
Line and all went on to distinguished
careers.
The
AMA’s Rev. Erastus Milo Cravath organized the College Department and the Mozart
Society, the first musical
organization in Tennessee.
Rising
enrollment added to the needs of the university. In 1870 Adam Knight Spence became principal
of the Fisk Normal School. To raise money and meet the needs of the growing student
body and ambitious building plans
his wife Catherine Mackie Spence traveled throughout the United
States to set up mission Sunday schools
in support of Fisk students, organizing endowments through the AMA.
A student choir was organized that became
known as the Fisk Jubilee Singers. In 1871 the Singers began to tour the North in support of the school and then
sailed for England in 1872 where
they performed for Queen Victoria. The successful tours, the first of many,
raised more than $50,000, enough to construct the school’s first permanent building Jubilee Hall, which was completed in 1876 and is now designated a National Historic Landmark. Through the rest of the 19th Century the school continued building program that resulted in
a modern campus.
Early
in the 20th Century Black teachers were finally added to the Faculty
including the Burrus brothers from the first graduating class.
From
1915 to 1925 Fayette Avery McKenzie,
a Progressive Era sociologist and
expert in and an advocate for Native
Americans, served as President of
Fisk. He was notably successful in
developing Fisk as the premier Black university in the United States, securing academic recognition as a standard college by the Carnegie Foundation, Columbia University, and the University of Chicago, raising a $1
million endowment fund to ensure quality faculty. Despite laying a firm foundation for Fisk’s accreditation and future success McKenzie’s on campus authoritarian management alienated students and much of the faculty
resulting in protests that led to
his forced resignation.
In
1930, Fisk was the first African-American institution to gain accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and
Schools (SACS). Accreditations
for specialized programs soon
followed.
But
it was not until 1947 that Fisk had a Black
President—Charles Spurgeon Johnson,
an acclaimed sociologist and scholar
who had also been the editor of Opportunity
magazine, a noted periodical of the Harlem Renaissance.
In
1952 Fisk became the first predominantly
Black college to earn a Phi Beta
Kappa charter and honored its
first student members on April 4, 1953.
In
1960 students from Fisk and from including John
Lewis, Dianne Nash, James Bevel, and C.T.
Vivian organized the Nashville
Sit-ins at the lunch counters of
major dime stores and department stores downtown. It was the largest and most sustained
such non-violent civil disobedience campaign
yet in the South which after a long, sustained effort led to the city becoming
the first Southern city to de-segregate public
accommodations. Lewis went on to be Chairman of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). He and the others became key figures in
the Southern Civil Rights Movement,
most notably in the Selma campaign for
voting rights.
Despite
Fisk’s notable achievements in academics and as training ground for Black
leadership, the school has struggled
financially in the 21st Century
as opportunities for talented Afro-American students opened up at all of the
country’s elite and prestigious universities and as liberal arts colleges in general fell out of favor to career-focused educational programs.
From
2004 to 2013, Fisk was directed by its 14th president, Hazel O’Leary, former
Secretary of Energy under President
Bill Clinton and just the second woman to serve lead the university. Under
her leadership Fisk successfully raised $4 million during the 2007-2008 fiscal ending
nine years of budget deficits and qualified for a Mellon Foundation challenge grant.
Despite
this respite the wolf was soon at the door again and a succession of
short term presidents failed to stem the
tide. Trustees have warned that the
school may be in danger of closing. With only 700 students, a significant decline
from peak attendance, the school has managed to maintain academic standards and
is still included in lists of both top historically
Black schools, and liberal arts colleges.
But
in 2017 SACS the university’s regional accreditor placed it on probation citing
failings related to financial
responsibility, control of research funds, and federal and state responsibilities.
Among
the many distinguished graduates of Fisk are Lil Hardin Armstrong, pianist,
composer, and wife of Louis Armstrong; former
Washington, DC mayor Marion Barry; William Dawson powerful Chicago South Side Congressman from
1943 to 1970; Repetitive Charles Diggs of
Michigan 1955-1980; W. E. B. Du Bois, leading Black
intellectual and co-founder of the National
Association for Colored People (NAACP); historian John Hope Franklin; poet
Nikki Giovanni; Julius Lester, children’s author, musician, photographer, and
professor; Congressman and senior
Civil Rights figure John Lewis; Dianne Nash; Hazel O’Leary; Ida B. Wells, civil rights leader and writer known for her anti-lynching campaigns and her Women’s Suffrage advocacy; and best-selling novelist Frank Yerby.
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