James E. Shepard

James Edward Shepard (November 3, 1875 – October 6, 1947) was an American pharmacist, civil servant and educator, the founder of what became the North Carolina Central University in Durham, North Carolina. He first established it as a private school for religious training in 1910 but adapted it as a school for teachers. He had a network of private supporters, including northern white philanthropists such as Olivia Slocum Sage of New York.

James E. Shepard
BornNovember 3, 1875
Raleigh, North Carolina
DiedOctober 6, 1947
NationalityAmerican
Occupationpharmacist
Years active1910–1947
Known forNorth Carolina Central University
Spouse(s)Annie Day Robinson

He served as the school's 1st president for nearly 40 years. By 1923, he secured state funding for it as a normal school, to continue the training of black teachers. After programs and classes were added to create a four-year curriculum, in 1925 it was renamed North Carolina College for Negroes, becoming the first liberal arts college in the nation for black students to be state-funded.[1]

Personal life and family

Shepard was born in Raleigh, NC, the son of Rev. Augustus and Harriet Whitted Shepard. He received undergraduate and professional training at Shaw University, from which he graduated in 1894.

The following year, he married Annie Day Robinson. They had three daughters, all now deceased: Marjorie A. Shepard (1896-1992) of Durham and Annie Day Shepard Smith (1899-1977) of New Bern, North Carolina and Marion (1902-1903). Smith had two daughters, Annie Day Smith Donaldson and Carolyn Marie Smith Green; both daughters had children, and Green has grandchildren.

Career

Shepard settled in the Hayti District, becoming one of the founders of development. He worked as a pharmacist in the community, and later as a civil servant, and religious educator. He became president of the school he founded, one originally intended to train clergy.

North Carolina Central University

Shepard in the early twentieth century

Shepard founded the private National Religious Training School and Chautauqua in the Hayti District in 1910. Originally, this institution was conceived as a center for religious training. Later, he renamed it the National Training School; it was supported by the philanthropy of Shepard's numerous black and white friends in both the North and the South. These included Olivia Slocum Sage of New York.

The school provided professional development for black teachers of the Jim Crow era; education was considered a high calling in the black community in the drive for everyone to become literate. Teachers from the school taught in rural Durham County.[2]

Shepard faced great difficulties in securing sufficient funding to keep the private school operating. He dealt with some of the issues of the Jim Crow era in his own way. At Christmas, white Durham merchants would bring selections of products to Shepard's office so that he could avoid "the possibility of dealing with rudeness downtown."[1]

He continued to lobby the North Carolina General Assembly for support of the "North Carolina College for Negroes." When going to the legislature, Shepard traveled by car in order to avoid the train, which had segregated seating according to the Jim Crow rules.[1]

When the North Carolina legislature approved state funding in 1923, the institution's name was changed to Durham State Normal School. In 1925, the program was expanded to a four-year curriculum, and the institution became North Carolina College for Negroes, the first state-supported liberal arts college for black people in North Carolina and in the United States. Its first four-year college class graduated in 1929.

In 1947, the name became North Carolina College at Durham. The 1969 General Assembly established the institution as one of the State's regional universities, and the name was changed to North Carolina Central University. Since 1972, NCCU has been a constituent institution of The University of North Carolina.

Legacy and honors

  • He led North Carolina State College through years of development and change, securing state funding for it.
  • A middle school in Durham is named for him.
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References

  1. Channing, Steven (2009-04-01). "John Hope Franklin, 1915-2009". Independent Weekly. Note: The state-supported Virginia State College, which had a 4-year curriculum by 1923, was founded as a land-grant school, rather than a liberal arts college.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2011-06-09.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link), North Carolina Collection, Durham County Library - "The Women Who Ran the Schools."

Further reading

  • Davis, Lenwood G., ed. Selected Writings and Speeches of James E. Shepard, 1896–1946: Founder of North Carolina Central University (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2013) 235 pp.
Preceded by
none
President of North Carolina Central University
19101947
Succeeded by
Alfonso Elder
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