Alabama & Georgia HBCUs By: CeCe Heard
Jan 12, 2016
Alabama & Georgia HBCUs
By: CeCe Heard
Montgomery, Alabama Public Christian and Baptist 1867, in Marion, Alabama The school started as the Lincoln Normal
School with $500 raised by nine freed slaves now known as the Marion Nine, making ASU one of the nation’s oldest institutions of higher education founded for black Americans.
Alabama State University
Huntsville, Alabama Public Christian 1875 Taught industrial education and became the
“State Normal and Industrial School at Huntsville.”
Alabama A&M
Selma, Alabama Public Christian 1922 Boasts a student body representing a
diversity of geographic, ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds, as well as the distinctive status as the nation’s only Historically Black Lutheran College or University (HBCU).
Concordia College
Fairfield, Alabama Public Christian 1898 Saw educated leadership as the paramount
need in the black community.
Miles College
Tuscaloosa, Alabama Public Christian 1875
Stillman College
Tuskegee, Alabama Public Christian 1881 “The Pride of the swift, growing South.”
Tuskegee University
Talladega, Alabama Public Christian 1865 "...We regard the education of our children
and youths as vital to the preservation of our liberties, and true religion as the foundation of all real virtue, and shall use our utmost endeavors to promote these blessings in our common country."
Talladega College
Mobile, Alabama Public Christian 1927 Established as an in-service arm of Alabama
State College that offered extension courses to African-American elementary and secondary teachers in Mobile.
Bishop State Community College
Huntsville, Alabama Private Christian 1896 To educate the recently-freed African-
Americans of the South. Drawing upon its Christian faith and the emancipation of slaves by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863, it believed that “all people are created equal” and deserved the opportunity to learn a trade.
Oakwood College
Decatur, Georgia Private Christian 1865 Offers undergraduate, graduate, and
professional degrees as well as certificate programs to students of diverse racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds.
Clark Atlanta University
Fort Valley, Georgia Public Christian 1895 To advance the cause of education with an
emphasis on a commitment to the community through a concept known as communiversity.
Fort Valley State University
Atlanta, Georgia Private Christian 1867 Morehouse is an academic community
dedicated to teaching, scholarship, and service, and the continuing search for truth as a liberating force.
Morehouse College
Atlanta, Georgia Private Methodist Episcopal 1881 The College is proud of its tradition of
serving the educational needs of the best and brightest young minds, while simultaneously providing educational support to students who might not otherwise receive the opportunity to compete on the college level.
Morris Brown College
Augusta, Georgia Public Christian Methodist Episcopal 1869 A school to train Negro teachers and
preachers so that they might in turn appropriately address the educational and spiritual needs of the people newly freed from the evils of slavery.
Paine College
Atlanta, Georgia Private Christian 1881 America's oldest historically Black college
for women
Spelman College