Our History
The Black Foundation was formed by a coalition of five black alumni of
We researched and found numerous organizations that assist and support these institutions in the form of scholarships. So we decided to concentrate on the physical campus. The two are a perfect marriage. Campus life and appearance alone with student activities are major components that keep students in and/or out of college, or from transferring to other colleges with more moderate student friendly campuses. The Black Foundation was founded January 21, 2007.
| Name | Website | |||||
| Alabama A&M University | http://www.aamu.edu | |||||
| Alabama State University | http://www.alasu.edu | |||||
| Albany State University | http://www.asurams.edu | |||||
| Alcorn State University | http://www.alcorn.edu | |||||
| Allen University | http://www.allenuniversity.edu | |||||
| Arkansas Baptist College | http://www.arbaptcol.edu | |||||
| Barber-Scotia College | http://www.b-sc.edu | |||||
| Benedict College | http://www.benedict.edu | |||||
| Bennett College | http://www.bennett.edu | |||||
| Bethune-Cookman University | http://www.bethune.cookman.edu | |||||
| Bishop State Community College | http://www.bscc.cc.alus | |||||
| Bluefield State College | http://www.bluefieldstate.edu | |||||
| Bowie State University | http://www.bowiestate.edu | |||||
| Central State University | http://www.centralstate.edu | |||||
| Charles R. Drew University | http://www.cdrewu.edu | |||||
| Cheyney University | http://www.cheyney.edu | |||||
| Claflin University | http://www.claflin.edu | |||||
| Clark Atlanta University | http://www.cau.edu | |||||
| Clinton Junior College | http://www.clintonjuniorcollege.edu | |||||
| Coahoma Community College | http://www.ccc.cc.ms.us | |||||
| Concordia College | http://www.concordiaselma.edu | |||||
| Coppin State University | http://www.coppin.edu | |||||
| CUNY- The Medgar Evers College | http://www.mec.cuny.edu | |||||
| Delaware State University | http://www.desu.edu | |||||
| Denmark Technical College | http://www.denmarktech.com | |||||
| Dillard University | http://www.dillard.edu | |||||
| Edward Waters College | http://www.ewc.edu | |||||
| Elizabeth State University | http://www.ecsu.edu | |||||
| Fayetteville State University | http://www.uncfsu.edu | |||||
| Fisk University | http://www.fisk.edu | |||||
| Florida A&M University | http://www.famu.edu | |||||
| Florida Memorial University | http://www.fmc.edu | |||||
| Fort Valley State University | http://www.fvsu.edu | |||||
| Gadsden State Community College | http://www.gadsdenstate.edu | |||||
| Grambling State University | http://www.gram.edu | |||||
| Hampton University | http://www.hamptonu.edu | |||||
| Harris-Stowe State College | http://www.hssc.edu | |||||
| Hinds Community College | http://www.hindscc.edu | |||||
| Howard University | http://www.howard.edu | |||||
| Huston-Tillotson University | http://www.htu.edu | |||||
| Interdenominational Theological Center | http://www.itc.edu | |||||
| J.F. Drake State Technical College | http://www.dstc..cc.al.us | |||||
| Jackson State University | http://www.jsums.edu | |||||
| Jarvis Christian College | http://www.jarvis.edu | |||||
| Johnson C. Smith University | http://www.jcsu.edu | |||||
| Kentucky State University | http://www.kysu.edu | |||||
| Knoxville College | http://www.knoxvillecollege.edu | |||||
| Lane College | http://www.lanecollege.edu | |||||
| Langston University | http://www.lunet.edu | |||||
| Lawson State Community College | http://www.ls.cc.al.us | |||||
| LeMoyne-Owen College | http://www.loc.edu | |||||
| Lewis College of Business | http://www.lewiscollege.edu | |||||
| Lincoln University, MO. | http://www/lincolnu.edu | |||||
| Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) | http://www.lincoln.edu | |||||
| Livingstone College | http://www.livingstone.edu | |||||
| Mary Holmes College | http://www.maryholmes.edu | |||||
| Meharry Medical College | http://www.mmc.edu | |||||
| Miles College | http://www.miles.edu | |||||
| Mississippi Valley State University | http://www.mvsu.edu | |||||
| Morehouse College | http://www.morehouse.edu | |||||
| Morgan State University | http://www.morgan.edu | |||||
| Morris Brown College | http://www.morrisbrown.edu | |||||
| Morris College | http://www.morris.edu | |||||
| Norfolk State University | http://www.nsu.edu | |||||
| North Carolina A&T University | http://www.ncat.edu | |||||
| North Carolina Central University | http://www.nccu.edu | |||||
| Oakwood College | http://www.oakwood.edu | |||||
| Paine College | http://www.paine.edu | |||||
| Paul Quinn College | http://www.pqc.edu | |||||
| Philander Smith College | http://www.philander.edu | |||||
| Prairie View A&M University | http://www.pvamu.edu | |||||
| Rust College | http://www.rustcollege.edu | |||||
| Savannah State University | http://www.savstate.edu | |||||
| Selma University | ||||||
| Shaw University | http://www.shawuniversity.edu | |||||
| Shorter College | http://www.shortercollege.4t.com | |||||
| South Carolina State University | http://www.scsu.edu | |||||
| South University A&M College | http://www.subr.edu | |||||
| Southwestern Christian College | http://www.swcc.edu | |||||
| Spelman College | http://www.spelman.edu | |||||
| St. Augustine's College | http://www.st-aug.edu | |||||
| Saint Pauls College | http://www.saintpauls.edu | |||||
| St. Philip's College | http://www.accd.edu | |||||
| Shelton State Community College | http://www.shelton.cc.al.us | |||||
| Stillman College | http://www.stillman.edu | |||||
| Talladega College | http://www.talladega.edu | |||||
| Tennessee State University | http://www.tnstate.edu | |||||
| Texas College | http://www.texascollege.edu | |||||
| Texas Southern University | http://www.tsu.edu | |||||
| Tougaloo College | http://www.tougaloo.edu | |||||
| Tuskegee University | http://www.tuskegee.edu | |||||
| University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff | http://www.uapb.edu | |||||
| University of Maryland Eastern Shore | http://umes.edu | |||||
| University of the District of Columbia | http://www.udc.edu | |||||
| University of the Virgin Islands | http://www.uvi.edu | |||||
| Virginia State University | http://www.vsu.edu | |||||
| Virginia Union University | http://www.vuu.edu | |||||
| Voorhees College | http://www.voorhees.edu | |||||
| West Virginia State College | http://www.wvsc.edu | |||||
| Wilberforce University | http://www.wilberforce.edu | |||||
| Wiley College | http://www.wileyc.edu | |||||
| Winston-Salem University] | http://www.wssu.edu | |||||
| Xavier University of Louisiana | http://www.xula.edu | |||||
There are more than 100 historically Black colleges and universities in the
Segregation Era
Before the Civil War (1861-1865) the majority of Blacks in the
Private Institutions
The years between the Civil War and World War I (1914-1918) were an era of tremendous growth for American colleges and universities. Higher education spread primarily through institutions financed by public taxes, particularly the rapidly expanding land-grant colleges established by U.S. Congress in the Morrill Act of 1862. These land-grant institutions, coupled with a growing system of state colleges, marked the emergence of a distinctive style of American higher education: publicly supported institutions of higher learning serving a broad range of students as well as the cultural, economic, and political interests of various local and state constituencies.
African American higher education took a different path. From the Reconstruction era through World War II (1939-1945) the majority of Black students were enrolled in private colleges. Northern religious mission societies were primarily responsible for establishing and maintaining the leading Black colleges and universities. African American religious philanthropy also established a significant number.
Given the virtual nonexistence of public education for Blacks in the South, these institutions had to provide preparatory courses at the elementary and high school levels for their students. Often they did not offer college-level courses for years until their students were prepared for them. Nonetheless, the missionary aims of these early schools reflected the ideals of classical liberal education that dominated American higher education in general in that period, with its emphasis on ancient languages, natural sciences, and humanities. Blacks were trained for literacy, but also for teaching and the professions.
With the end of Reconstruction and the return of White rule in the South, however, opportunities for African American professionals became scarcer. Consequently many Black and White leaders turned toward industrial training. The proponents of industrial training, whose most public spokesman was Booker T. Washington of the Tuskegee Institute (now
Meanwhile, Harvard-trained scholar W. E. B. Du Bois was charting another path. Du Bois paired the liberal and scientific ideals of the missionaries with a conviction that Black life and culture should be a primary topic of Black thought and investigation. Du Bois criticized Washington and his allies for downplaying intellectual ambition and for appeasing Southern White leaders. Du Bois's criticisms gained influence in the following decades, and by the end of World War I, Black leaders had largely turned against
Public Institutions during Jim Crow
Private missionary colleges figured so heavily in the overall scheme of higher education for African Americans because various states virtually excluded Blacks from publicly supported higher education. Of the 17 Southern states that mandated racially segregated education during the Jim Crow era, 14 simply refused to establish land-grant colleges for African American students until Congress required them to do so in the 1890. But the institutions they established were colleges in name only. Not one met the land-grant requirement to teach agriculture, mechanical arts and liberal education on a collegiate level.
Black Institutions and Desegregation
With the founding of the United Negro College Fund (UNCF) in 1944, Black colleges and universities enlisted the support of corporate philanthropy and the donations of thousands of individuals. African Americans also continued to press for equality in public higher education their efforts encouraged by the Supreme Court decision in Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada in 1938, which forced Southern state governments to concede more resources for the improvement of African American higher education than at any time since the Reconstruction era.
During the early 1950s, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) turned its efforts from educational equality to school desegregation. Its work culminated successfully in the Sweatt v. Painter (1950) and Brown v. Board of Education (1954) desegregation decisions, although these decisions had little direct effect on Black colleges.
This success in the courts sparked a new optimism about the future of African American higher education. But during the last four decades of the 20th century, that optimism was tempered by the endurance of old problems. Private colleges and universities had not built up a solid financial base. At the start of new millennium, raising money remains the major challenge for a Black college president or chancellor. Private Black colleges are struggling to keep their funding sources viable and to fight off financial starvation in an increasingly competitive environment. Public Black colleges are fighting to obtain their fair share of state support, and this struggle is greatly compromised by inaction and resistance from state legislatures.
In 1992 the Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Fordice that patterns of racial segregation still remained in Mississippi¹s public university system, nearly 40 years after Brown v. Board of Education The slow elimination of segregation has in general had mixed blessings for Black colleges and universities, as integrated White institutions have drawn Black students and support away from the traditional Black schools. But after stagnating enrollments in the 1970s and 1980s, the student population at HBCUs rose 25 percent between 1986 and 1994, an increase greater than the average for
Source: "Colleges and Universities, Historically Black, in the United States" by James D. Anderson at Africana.com