From NKAA, Notable Kentucky African Americans Database (main entry)

African American Schools in Carroll County, KY

When R. W. Bevarly was completing his master's thesis in 1936, he located articles about the colored schools of Carroll County in 1879 in the Carrollton Democrat newspaper. The colored school at Liberty Station was attended by children during the day and by adults at night; in Carrollton, Maggie Woods was the teacher [source: History of Education in Carroll County, by R. W. Bevarly, p. 66]. There were three schools in 1880; the teachers at these schools were Ady Pack in Ghent and Maggie Woods in Carrollton and Prestonville [source: U.S. Federal Census]. In 1881 there were 226 students in the four colored schools [source: Bevarly, p. 50]. In 1882 there were 268 students in the schools located in Carrollton, Ghent, Above Ghent, and Liberty Station [source: Bevarly, p. 51]. There were five colored school districts in 1885: No. 1 Carrollton, No. 2 Ghent, No. 3 Lynan Craigs, No. 4 Sanders, and No. 5 Worthville [source: Bevarly, p. 30].

All of the schools were under the county school board with the largest colored school in Carrollton where  James K. Polk was the teacher. He was a graduate of Gaines High School in Cincinnati, OH [source: Bevarly, p. 66]. He taught at the colored school for one year  then replaced by J. E. Jackson. In 1889 Jackson was replaced by Fred W. Burch, also a graduate of Gaines High School. There continued to be five colored schools in Carroll County until 1900 when a sixth was added, but by 1933 there were only two [source: Bevarly, p. 94].

Dunbar Colored School in Carrollton was in a brick building under the control of the city school board. Bessie Whitacker was the teacher, receiving a monthly salary of $69, while her husband Dudley Whitacker had a salary of $75 for teaching at the Ghent Colored School held in a rented building that was in poor condition [source: Bevarly, p. 94]. After WWII, a new colored school building was constructed in Ghent that  served as the county school for all African American children. There was never a colored high school in Carroll County; the city and county provided transportation for high school students attending Lincoln Institute [source: A History of Carroll County, Kentucky: containing facts before and after 1754, by M. A. Gentry, p. 53]. The school systems of Carroll County began to integrate in the 1960s, starting with the first grade students [source: "Schools due to integrate at Carrollton," Courier-Journal, 4/22/1961]. The schools listed as integrated in the Kentucky Public School Directory, 1961-62, were the Carrollton Elementary and High School (for Whites) on p. 846.

  • Carrollton School
  • Prestonville School
  • Dunbar School
  • Ghent School
  • Above Gent School
  • Lynn Craigs School
  • Sanders School
  • Worthville School
  • Liberty Station School

Kentucky County & Region

Read about Carroll County, Kentucky in Wikipedia.

Kentucky Place (Town or City)

Read about Carrollton, Kentucky in Wikipedia.
Read about Prestonville, Kentucky in Wikipedia.
Read about Ghent, Kentucky in Wikipedia.
Read about Above Ghent, Kentucky in Wikipedia.
Read about Lynn Craig, Kentucky in Wikipedia.
Read about Sanders, Kentucky in Wikipedia.
Read about Worthville, Kentucky in Wikipedia.
Read about Liberty Station, Kentucky in Wikipedia.

Item Relations

Cite This NKAA Entry:

“African American Schools in Carroll County, KY,” Notable Kentucky African Americans Database, accessed July 26, 2024, https://nkaa.uky.edu/nkaa/index.php/items/show/2745.

Last modified: 2023-02-08 17:19:35