Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Orlando first Black school


According to author and Jones High School graduate Leroy Argrett Jr., education for Black residents of Orlando dates to 1886 at a school called “Orlando Black.” The school, located at the southwest corner of Garland Avenue and Church Street was “not much of an organized school” but it set the precedent for formalized education for the Orlando African American Community. He lists four principals who oversaw the school from 1886 to 1894:

  • P.T. Dodson (1886-87)
  • S.A. Williams (1887-89)
  • C. Jackson (1889-91)
  • J. T. Shuften (1891-94)

In 1895, the school was relocated to the corner of Jefferson and Chatham streets and renamed the Johnson Academy.[1] According to the Jones High School Historical Society webpage, the Academy was named after Lyman Johnson, who was principal from 1895 to 1906, and supervised the move to the new location.[2]

Differing dates

There is some disagreement, however, in the date that the school opened. Mark Andrews, history columnist for the Orlando Sentinel, wrote in a 1994 article that according to William Blackman’s History of Orange County Florida, the first Black School in Orange County dates to 1877. He also notes that educator and historian Thelma Dudley asserted in her 1993 doctoral dissertation that in 1871 a school was created in Orange County for the education of Black youth.[3] But in another Andrew’s article citing Dudley’s research, he states that the “Orlando Colored School was founded in 1886.”[4]

Jim Robison clarifies that the first documented school in Orange County opened in 1877 near Sorrento at a settlement called Benton Prairie. He reveals that in 1877, all of Seminole County plus parts of Lake and Osceola Counties were part of then-Orange County. [5]

But according to a 1982 article about attempts to raise money to restore the old Callahan School, “the first Orlando Colored School was approved by the Orange County School Board” in 1882, four years before Argrett’s date of 1886.[6] A further contradiction appears in the notice about the Board of Public Instruction in the Orlando Evening Star from Dec. 1884 that notes that the “salary of assistant teacher of Orlando colored school was set at $35.”[7] It could be that the school board approved and set the salary a couple years before the school officially opened in 1886.

School board ledgers

The school board ledgers in the collection of the Orange County Regional History paints a compelling picture of the Orlando Colored School, which is abbreviated as “Orlando Cold” in the first volume. Designated School No. 35, the 1886 school year under P.T. Dodson went from October through March and averaged about 20 students a day. The following year principal S.A. Williams experiences a large increase in the number of students, rising to an average of 157 students over 7 months. As result total teacher salaries increases from $187 in 1886 to $1,400 in 1887. The first ledger goes through 1893 school year, while a second shows Lyman Johnson in charge in 1895. An 1893 entry shows that there were 6 teachers in addition to the principal teaching grades one through three. 

Masonic Hall on Garland and Church

The 1887 Sanborn fire insurance map confirms that there was a school at the time on the southwest corner of Garland Avenue and Church Street. The map also shows a Masonic Hall in the same space.[8]  E.H. Gore’s History of Orlando explains that the “first fraternal lodge in Orlando was Lodge No. 69 Free and Accepted Masons, which received its charter January 13, 1876” and their first Masonic Hall was located at Garland Avenue and Church Street. According to Gore, the lot was donated by Orlando pioneer William Patrick, and the hall was built “thereon April 1, 1882.”[9] According to the Lodge’s website, the structure was to be a 26’X40’ two-story building made of “rough lumber and unplastered interior walls.” The text on the website explains that the upper floor was used as the Masonic Lodge the lower floor was “given to Public Schools, where three grades met.”[10]

In the first volume of Orlando: A Centennial History, Eve Bacon wrote that the first floor of the Lodge was empty until it was loaned to the city for use as a schoolroom. “Three grades and three teachers were moved into the building” she writes, “all three grades occupied the same room, but were arranged in groups by grade.”[11]

According to the Lodge No. 69 website, the Masons sold the Church Street property in 1888 and moved to a new location on Pine Street.

Conclusions

Several contemporary newspaper articles reported that by 1884 “seven of Orange County’s 94 schools were dedicated to teaching black children.”[12] As mentioned before that the area of Orange County was much larger than it is today, as Lake and Osceola Counties were formed in 1887 from portions of Orange County, and Seminole was not created until 1913. Bacon states that in 1884 there were 292 students living inside the Orlando city limits and fifty-eight living outside of its boundaries.[13] Although that number seems high, Orlando experienced meteoric growth during this period due to the arrival of the railroad, going from a population of just 200 in 1880 to 2,000 in 1886. The ledgers at the History Center show that the Orlando Black/Orlando Colored School was operating in 1886. It moved in 1895 and renamed the Johnson Academy which would become Jones High School in 1921. 

Although none of the sources that connect the Masonic Hall to its use as a school mention that it was a school for Black children, there are multiple sources listing the location of Orlando Black/Orlando Colored School as Garland and Church, so one can conclude that the Masonic Hall was site of what may have been Orlando’s first school for African American children. 

A group of people posing for a photo

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Figure 1:

Photo from How Distant Seems Our Starting Place Black history exhibit at the Orange County Regional History Center

A collage of a church and a group of people

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Figure 2: Page from a brochure in the collection of the Orange County Regional History Center shows the full uncropped photograph used in the How Distant Now Seems Our Starting Place Black History exhibit.

 


A close up of a book

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Figure 3: Detail of School Board Ledger showing entries for School No. 35 (Orlando Cold) for 1886 and 1887

A close-up of a map

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Figure 4: Sanborn Map Company, Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Orlando, Florida, showing the location of the “School” and  “Masonic Hall” at the intersection of Garland Avenue and Church Street


A close-up of a newspaper

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Figure 5: Screen capture from the history page of the website for Orlando Lodge No. 69 Free and Accepted Masons

A person with a mustache and a suit

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Figure 6: J.T. Shuften, the fourth principal at the Orlando Colored School, was also the publisher of The Colored American, the first Black-owned newspaper in Georgia. He is one of the first Black journalists in Florida and was the first Black attorney to practice law in Orlando.

A yellow paper with text

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Figure 7: Notice from the Board of Public Instruction from the Orlando Evening Star published on Thursday, December 18, 1884 stating that the salary for assistant teachers at the Orlando colored school was fixed at $35.

Contemporary view of the intersection of Church and Garland



[1] Leroy Argreet, Jr., A History of the Black Community of Orlando Florida, p. 30.

[3] County’s earliest black schools were established on a shoestring, Orlando Sentinel, May 22, 1994, p. 210 

[4] Teacher researches the struggle of segregated Jones High, Orlando Sentinel, Feb. 28, 1993, p.81

[5] Educator’s legacy still thrives, Orlando Sentinel, Feb. 6, 2005, pK2

[6] Party to raise funds to restore Callahan School, Orlando Sentinel, April 28, 1982, p. 3

[7] Board of Public Instruction, Orlando Evening Star, Dec. 18, 1884, p.3

[8] http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.gmd/g3934om.g3934om_g013221887

[9] E.H. Gore, History of Orlando, p. 47

[11] Eve Bacon, Orlando A Centennial History, Vol. 1, p. 114

[12] Establishing the 1st school district was an education itself, Orlando Sentinel, p. 167

[13] Bacon, p.114

Monday, May 25, 2026

Mural Mystery Solved (Mostly)

With the help of friends, I was recently able to solve a mystery that I first stumbled across in 2009 connected to a photograph from 1937. I first came across the image while I was diving into the archives of the Joy Postle Collection to source images for an article to be published in Reflections magazine. Thanks to Denise Hall, the collection at UCF is quite extensive and includes artwork, photographs and even the artist's diary she kept during the 1930s. The photo that intrigues me so much was of a group of dignified people, gathered in front of a large painting of a Seminole Indian. On the back in pen is written:

1937

W.P.A. Art Project

Trip to U. of F. Gainesville

Joy P. Don Emory

M. Runyon in Center

Special Collections & University Archives Libraries

University of Central Florida


I recently returned to the archives while researching Joy Postle's Casa Iberia mural on the Rollins College campus and was reminded that I had never figured out the location of the image, who painted the beautiful artwork, or who the rest of the people in the photo were. So I reached out to Flo Turcotte at the Archives at UF and she enlisted the help of fellow archivist Sarah Coates.  It was she who discovered the location of the image:

"Found it! It was over the fireplace in the Bryan Lounge that was in the Florida Union, now Dauer Hall. I have no idea if this painting is still there, nor do I know what the old Bryan Lounge was turned into once the building was no longer the Florida Union.

 She also sent links showing the space with the painting: 

To find out if the painting was still hanging on campus, I turned to Pam Marlin, an Instagram contact who works at UF and has done incredible then and now photo work on campus – you can explore her site here. Here was her response to my inquiries about the paintings whereabouts: 

"I don’t believe the painting is still hanging in the building. I’ve been to Dauer Hall many times over the years, mostly for events at the Keene Faculty Center (created when Dauer Hall was renovated in the 1990s).  The room with the fireplace and painting may have been part of today's faculty center, however, this particular area has been subdivided. It is now configured into multiple rooms that house the Classics Department (with the Religion Department upstairs). 
I walked over to Dauer today and captured a photo of the SE corner of the building where I think the original fireplace and painting were (see attached).  Visible in the photo is an exterior view of the large bay window (seen in the old interior photos) and exterior chimney stacks (suggesting a fireplace).    I also walked into the Classics Department area specifically looking for the bay window and the fireplace, but the space is now divided into many rooms, some wood-paneled, with no fireplace or a view of the large bay window. My guess is that the fireplace was either covered or removed during renovation, and possibly the painting along with it.  The beautiful interior arches have been removed as well."
Courtesy Pam Marlin

Pam later went inside Dauer Hall and reported:

"I walked over to Classics again and talked briefly with Robert Wagman, former Classics department chair (2009).  His office is located along the same wall as the fireplace (between the fireplace and the bay window) and it has the original dark wood paneling.  He told me that there is a wall over the fireplace, and likely the mural as well.  He took me to the room where it was located and tapped on the hollow wall.  He mentioned that when he was chair he encouraged them to open the wall, which they did not.  I have attached a photo (it is the back wall)." 

Courtesy Pam Marlin

As disappointed as I was that the painting is no longer viewable on campus, I was thrilled when both Pam and Sarah discovered the name of the artist who painted it: Fred Madden. Madden both attended and taught at UF. He painted the mural in 1936, the year before the photograph was taken. I found an article with photos of both the mural and a photo of the artist, and that allowed me to identify him in the group photo, standing front and center, just left of Joy Postle. 


From the Miami News, Oct. 1945

Madden, apparently an accomplished muralist like Postle, taught art at Camp Roosevelt, as did Postle, so it is likely they knew each other. Sorting out the other folks in the photo is a bit of challenge. Artist Manny Runyon, mentioned in the inscription on the back, appears to be the bearded fellow near the center of the image. O. C. R. Stageberg, UF professor of art and architecture could be the be to the right of Runyon, but it is difficult to be sure. It's also possible that Eve Alsman Fuller, an important figure at Camp Roosevelt, and an acquaintance of Postle, is one of the women on the left. Other possible people in attendance include Warren Doolittle, Van H. Ferguson, and William F. Lockwood. That aspect of the mystery still remains unsolved!

Halifax Historical Society

Don W. Emery


UPDATE: While attending a reception at the Halifax Historical Museum in Daytona Beach, I noticed several striking murals on the wall signed by "Don J." and "Don W. Emery." There was a display of the work by Don W., who was the son of Don J., but none of the photos matched anyone in my UCF image. But museum docent Carol Ann Moritz knew exactly where to look in the archives, and we found an image of Don W. He is standing behind Joy Postle, to the right. Another piece of the puzzle found!