Dunbar High School Traveling exhibit on display at CHARTS
On exhibit until October 16, 2020 in the Center for Humanities and Arts (CHARTS) lobby is the Dunbar High School Traveling exhibit brought by the Mosaic Templars Cultural Center in Little Rock.
About Paul Laurence Dunbar High School
Little Rock's Paul Laurence Dunbar High School has long been a symbol of opportunity, achievement, and pride in the African American community. It served as the city's only African American high school from 1929 to 1955.
Built-in 1929 with funding from the Julius Rosenwald Foundation and the Rockefeller General Education Fund, the school was briefly named the Negro School for Industrial Arts. Under pressure from the African American community, which had raised money for the school's construction, the school expanded its industrial curriculum to include college preparatory courses. On April 14, 1930, the school was dedicated as Paul Laurence Dunbar High School. The new name honored African American poet Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906) and the school's new mission.
A Dunbar education became synonymous with academic excellence and became desired around the state. In 1931, the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA) endorsed Dunbar's academics with regional accreditation. Dunbar was the only black high school in Arkansas with NCA accreditation until 1938, when Fort Smith's Lincoln High School was added. Dunbar became a junior high in 1955 when Horace Mann High School opened as the last black high school in segregated Little Rock.
The National Dunbar Alumni Association of Little Rock (NDAA) continues the legacy of Dunbar High School. With chapters in Chicago, Detroit, Los Angeles, Denver, Seattle, St. Louis, Washington, D.C., San Francisco and Little Rock, the NDAA has dedicated itself to "perpetuating the ‘Dunbar Spirit' of excellence" through community service and by documenting the history of Dunbar High School.
The Dunbar High School exhibit in the CHARTS lobby at the Main Campus in North Little Rock is free to view and is open to the public. The exhibit can also be viewed virtually at the following: Dunbar High School Traveling Exhibit
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