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This was done at a time when slavery was still legal in the U.S. Within two months the enrollment grew from 6 to 40, and, despite hostility from a portion of the community, the school prospered. Contributions from
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royalties. The school was forced to move three times in its first two years, but in 1854 it settled on a 3-acre (1.2-hectare) lot with house and barn on the edge of the city.
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106:. Although the school offered primary schooling and classes in domestic skills, its emphasis from the outset was on training Black women to become teachers.
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Miner's School was closed during the Civil War. The school was eventually reopened after her death and merged with other local institutions to become the
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whose school for
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Miner guided the school through its fruitful early years but had to lessen her connection because of failing health. In 1857,
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This Noble Woman: Myrtilla Miner and Her Fight to
Establish a School for African American Girls in the Slaveholding South
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accident in 1864 ended that hope and Miner died shortly after her return to
Washington, D.C. She is buried in
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took over leadership of the school and in 1861 Miner went to
California in an attempt to regain her health. A
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She taught at various schools, including the Newton Female
Institute in 1846–1847 at
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In 1856 the school came under the care of a board of trustees, among whom were
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Myrtilla Miner's ‘School for
Colored Girls’: A Mirror on Antebellum Washington
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34:– December 17, 1864, Washington, D.C.) was an American educator and
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Williams, Richard L. (October 11, 2009). "Teacher of Blacks".
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283:. Boston, and New York: Houghton, Mifflin, 1885.
419:Burials at Oak Hill Cemetery (Washington, D.C.)
192:, Washington, D.C., vol. 52, 1989, pp. 254–268
40:the only public university in Washington, D.C.
394:University of the District of Columbia people
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142:in Washington, D.C., is named in her honor.
336:National Abolition Hall of Fame and Museum
190:Records of the Columbia Historical Society
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354:University of the District of Columbia
111:University of the District of Columbia
429:American women civil rights activists
369:19th-century American women educators
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145:Miner was a 2013 Inductee into the
23:Myrtilla Miner, by J. A. J. Wilcox
16:American educator and abolitionist
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242:History - Miner Elementary School
399:People from Brookfield, New York
424:19th-century American educators
414:Activists from Washington, D.C.
409:Educators from New York (state)
404:Activists from New York (state)
389:Educators from Washington, D.C.
216:(Spring): 23–25. Archived from
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74:Normal School for Colored Girls
51:Young Ladies' Domestic Seminary
207:"A Natural Right to Knowledge"
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292:. Chicago Review Press, 2018.
130:Georgetown, Washington, D.C.
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49:Miner was educated at the
345:History of American Women
214:New York Archives Journal
85:continued to arrive, and
72:In 1851 Miner opened the
301:Journal of Negro History
280:Myrtilla Miner: A memoir
67:Whitesville, Mississippi
327:Encyclopædia Britannica
140:Miner Elementary School
57:, New York, and at the
374:American abolitionists
350:Myrtilla Miner Tribute
59:Clover Street Seminary
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87:Harriet Beecher Stowe
30:(March 4, 1815, near
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286:Greenburg, Michael.
223:on 12 September 2014
205:Roe, Denise (2013).
89:gave $ 1,000 of her
32:Brookfield, New York
295:Wormley, G. Smith.
277:O'Connor, Ellen M.
184:Null, Druscilla J.
151:Peterboro, New York
63:Rochester, New York
100:Henry Ward Beecher
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126:Oak Hill Cemetery
92:Uncle Tom's Cabin
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257:. Retrieved
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227:11 September
225:. Retrieved
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384:1864 deaths
379:1815 births
259:November 7,
363:Categories
157:References
45:Biography
122:carriage
83:Quakers
55:Clinton
135:Legacy
221:(PDF)
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261:2023
229:2014
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