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Local merchant, Alvarez Fisk (1784–1853) founded the
Natchez Institute with a donation of land, buildings, and money. The first building held up to 1,000 students. Prior to the formation of this school, only wealthy residents could afford a formal education for their children, and most parents didn’t
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In the 1850s, Natchez
Institute school enrolled kindergarten through 12th grade, and had as many as 750 students in attendance. Because of unexpected high enrollment, more than half of the city‘s revenue was allotted for the school. The original building for Natchez Institute burned down. It was
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rebuilt in 1901 as a larger school building with a tower. The school received push back by many of the wealthy men in
Natchez who objected to tax money funding public schools.
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in
Natchez, built in 1871, was the first public school by the city for African American students. It was at the southeast corner of North Union and Monroe Streets.
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Natchez
National Historical Park, General Management Plan (GMP) and Development Concept Plan: Environmental Impact Statement
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Natchez
Institute's main building at 108 Commerce Street is now the home of the Historic Natchez Foundation. The
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have formal education themselves. Natchez
Institute was racially segregated and was "for whites-only".
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was a segregated K-12 public school "for whites-only" established in 1845 and closed in ? in
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at 111 S. Pearl Street was once used as a performance hall for the school, and is now a
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280:. Mississippi Department of Archives and History. May 2008. Archived from
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National
Register of Historic Places listings in Adams County, Mississippi
319:. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. pp. 80, 99.
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Former
Natchez Institute building (2008), designed by architect
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The
Enigmatic South: Toward Civil War and Its Legacies
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502:Buildings and structures in Natchez, Mississippi
243:, an early all-male prep school in Adams County
463:Education, Mississippi State Dept of (1890).
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492:Educational institutions established in 1845
159:Location of Natchez Institute in Mississippi
16:Former public school in Natchez, Mississippi
384:"Historic foundation earns $ 160,000 grant"
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433:Gandy, Joan W.; Gandy, Thomas H. (1999).
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44:Natchez, Adams County, Mississippi, U.S.
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517:Education segregation in Mississippi
512:Schools in Adams County, Mississippi
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439:. Arcadia Publishing. p. 123.
409:"History ready to greet you Friday"
335:Hyde, Jr., Samuel C. (2014-11-03).
224:National Register of Historic Place
487:1845 establishments in Mississippi
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436:Natchez: City Streets Revisited
241:Jefferson College (Mississippi)
236:History of Natchez, Mississippi
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497:Public schools in Mississippi
247:List of Mississippi Landmarks
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313:James, D. Clayton (1993).
33:Natchez Institute, c. 1900
341:. LSU Press. p. 37.
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220:United States Courthouse
275:"Mississippi Landmarks"
70:31.559984°N 91.402784°W
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181:since June 20, 1985.
507:Mississippi Landmarks
222:, and is listed as a
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75:31.559984; -91.402784
367:. 1994. p. 202.
179:Mississippi Landmark
108:Mississippi Landmark
42:108 Commerce Street,
469:. pp. 330–334.
126:001-NAT-0081-NRD-ML
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316:Antebellum Natchez
287:on October 9, 2010
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123:Reference no.
446:978-0-7385-0325-7
348:978-0-8071-5695-7
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118:June 20, 1985
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417:. Retrieved
415:. 2008-11-04
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392:. Retrieved
390:. 2001-03-14
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289:. Retrieved
282:the original
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209:Union School
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291:January 10,
73: /
49:Coordinates
481:Categories
419:2023-01-10
394:2023-01-10
258:References
115:Designated
61:91°24′10″W
58:31°33′36″N
230:See also
39:Location
185:History
175:Natchez
94:Rebuilt
466:Report
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285:(PDF)
278:(PDF)
86:Built
441:ISBN
343:ISBN
293:2023
169:The
97:1901
89:1845
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.