William Henry Holtzclaw

William Henry Holtzclaw (1870–1943) was an educator and the founder of Utica Institute in Mississippi. Holtzclaw was a graduate of the Tuskegee Institute and desired to start his own school.[1] He settled in Utica, Mississippi, bought land on credit, and persuaded the locals to appoint him teacher of what was then called the Utica Negro School in 1902.[2] Holtzclaw and his students built the first and second school buildings themselves.[1]:112 By 1903 the school had 225 pupils and was supported by white and black members of the community.[2] The school became incorporated by the state of Mississippi as the Utica Normal and Industrial Institute for the Training of Colored Young Men and Women and taught both academic subjects and also vocational work. [2] Holtzclaw became principal of the school and worked on attracting funds, and received donations from Andrew Carnegie.[3]

William Henry Holtzclaw
William H. Holtzclaw from his book The Black Man's Burden
Born1870
Roanoke Alabama
Died1943

Holtzclaw was also a writer. He published two newspapers, the monthly Utica News and a school newspaper, Southern Notes.[3] He published his autobiography, The Black Man’s Burden, in 1915.

The school became Utica Institute Junior College, then the Utica campus of Hinds Community College.[3] The school’s library is the William H. Holtzclaw Library.[4] Holtzclaw's house, called the Holtzclaw Mansion was the last surviving building from the original campus. It was listed as one of the ten most endangered places in Mississippi and was demolished in 2014.[5]

Personal life

Holtzclaw was born in Randolph County, Alabama, near the town of Roanoke, to Jerry and Addie Greer Holtzclaw. He wrote directly to Booker T. Washington asking for and receiving admission to Tuskegee Institute. He was married to educator Mary Ella Patterson who he met at Tuskeegee and they had two sons.

gollark: Using methods.
gollark: I could play osmarks internet radio™ instead.
gollark: Yes, it's mandatory.
gollark: No, I'm just using some audio routing hax™ to play https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQPncqz6PoI into voice chat.
gollark: This is NOT true. I have not in any way been sponsored by pizza companies. There have been no advertising agreements whatsoever with any companies producing pizza or otherwise to have me subliminally advertise pizza, as my profile picture is not a pizza. Since it is not a pizza, this is obviously not pizza advertisement whatsoever. No monetary exchanges or otherwise have occurred with companies engaged in pizza production for any reason relating to my profile picture. You are clearly engaged in libel and attempting to discredit my non-pizza-advertising status. It is IN NO WAY subliminal pizza advertising because I DO NOT work for pizza companies in any form. It's not pizza. There were no deals, under-the-table or otherwise, with pizza companies. No pizza companies pay for any kind of subliminal advertising involving me. People make that mistake, but I am not working for pizza companies doing subliminal advertising; that is not in any way what I am doing. I am NOT being sponsored by ANY pizza companies to display subliminal pizza advertising OF ANY KIND.

References

  1. Washington, Booker T. (2016-10-23). "Introduction to the Black man's burden". Internet Archive. Retrieved 2019-01-10.
  2. Cotton, Gordon (2019-01-10). "William H. Holtzclaw: He was determined to help his people". The Randolph Leader. Retrieved 2019-01-10.
  3. Ownby, Ted. "William Henry Holtzclaw". Mississippi Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2019-01-10.
  4. "William H. Holtzclaw Library (Utica)". Hinds Community College. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  5. "Holtzclaw Mansion". MS 10 Most. 2016-02-02. Retrieved 2019-01-10.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.