Showing Collections: 1 - 4 of 4
Lincoln Institute Berea Hall cornerstone laying ceremony photographs, 1911
File — Box: 126: Oversized, Folder: 17
Identifier: RG 13-13.29-1378
Dates:
1911
Lincoln Institute collection
Collection
Identifier: RG 13-13.29
Abstract
The Lincoln Institute was an all-black boarding high school in Simpsonville, Kentucky, near Louisville, that operated from 1912 to 1966. The school was created by the trustees of Berea College after the Kentucky State Legislature passed the Day Law (1904) putting an end to the racially integrated education at Berea that had existed since the end of the Civil War. The founders originally intended the institute to be a college as well as a high school, but by the 1930s it gave up its junior...
Dates:
translation missing: en.enumerations.date_label.created: 1905 - 2023
Lincoln Institute Oral History Collection
Collection
Identifier: RG 14-14.02
Abstract
Lincoln Institute was an all-black boarding high school in Simpsonville, Kentucky, near Louisville, that operated from 1912 to 1966. The school was created by the trustees of Berea College after the Kentucky State Legislature passed the Day Law (1904) putting an end to the racially integrated education at Berea that had existed since the end of the Civil War. The founders originally intended Lincoln to be a college as well as a high school, but by the 1930s it gave up its junior college...
Dates:
translation missing: en.enumerations.date_label.created: 2003 - 2008
Nora Lou Thomson Treese Collection
Collection
Identifier: RG 08-8.26
Abstract
Mary Lou Thomson Treese was a 1944 graduate of Berea College. She was the daughter of Edith Ellis Thomson and Dr. A. Eugene Thomson who both attended Berea and whose father's both taught at Berea. Dr. A. Eugene Thomson served as the first President of Lincoln Institute of Kentucky.
Dates:
Other: Majority of material found in 1907-1927