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    Home » Four pioneering colleges once in Jacksonville
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    Four pioneering colleges once in Jacksonville

    Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldFebruary 2, 20265 Mins Read
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    Four pioneering colleges once in Jacksonville
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    Local Voices. Statewide Impact. Stay Informed with North Florida News

    Key takeaways
    • Cookman Institute relocated after 1901 fire, expanded to Sugar Hill, preparing Black teachers and trades before merging to form Bethune-Cookman.
    • Florida Baptist Academy fostered Black intellectual life; site where “Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing” was created and educated future leaders like Zora Neale Hurston.
    • Jones College grew from a home-based business school to a 12-story Arlington campus, closing after lost accreditation in 2016 and closing in 2017.
    • Walker’s Commercial & Vocational College taught practical skills—shorthand, bookkeeping, radio repair—serving veterans and communities until 1970 under Dr. Julia S. Walker-Brown.
    • Each institution evolved through relocations, mergers, or renamings, leaving enduring educational legacies and repurposed historic campuses in Jacksonville.

    Cookman Institute (1872-1925)


    A sketch of the Cookman Institute’s Jacksonville campus. | State Archives of Florida

    Founded in 1872 by Reverend S.B. Darnell, the Cookman Institute was Florida’s first institution of higher learning for African Americans. Named for Reverend Alfred Cookman, a supporter who funded its first building, the school was originally located at Beaver and Hogan Streets in Downtown Jacksonville and affiliated with Atlanta’s Clark University. It offered day and night classes to prepare teachers in both religious and academic studies.

    After the Great Fire of 1901 destroyed the original campus, the Institute relocated to the Sugar Hill neighborhood, expanding its curriculum to include elementary through high school education and courses in music, domestic science, business, agriculture, and the trades. Enrollment reached about 250 students. Among its notable alumni was A. Philip Randolph, later a key leader in the Harlem Renaissance and the civil rights movement.

    To meet the growing need for African American teachers, Cookman merged in 1925 with Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune’s Daytona Normal and Industrial Institute, forming the Daytona-Cookman Collegiate Institute. Renamed Bethune-Cookman College in 1931, it became Bethune-Cookman University in 2007. The original Jacksonville site later became Darnell-Cookman School of the Medical Arts, now an “A” rated and National Blue Ribbon magnet school.

    Florida Baptist Academy (1892-1918)


    Graduates of the Florida Baptist Academy in 1907. | University of North Florida

    Founded in 1892 by Reverend Matthew Gilbert, Reverend J.T. Brown, and Sarah Ann Blocker, the Florida Baptist Academy began in Jacksonville’s Eastside on Cleveland Street (now East 6th Street). The school’s mission was to provide African Americans with industrial, agricultural, mechanical, and teacher education rooted in religious values. It became a center of Black intellectual life, most notably, where brothers James Weldon and J. Rosamond Johnson wrote and composed “Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing” in 1900. J. Rosamond Johnson was a noted faculty member of the school, recruited by college President Nathan White Collier.

    Among its early students was Zora Neale Hurston, sent to the academy after her mother’s death. Though financial hardship forced her to leave, Hurston went on to become a leading figure of the Harlem Renaissance. The academy thrived with support from the Rockefeller General Education Board, Baptist associations, and national missionary organizations.

    In 1918, the school relocated to St. Augustine’s Old Homes Plantation, a former plantation, and became the Florida Normal and Industrial Institute. It later merged with the Florida Baptist Institute in 1941, evolving into a four-year college where Hurston would later teach part-time.

    Renamed Florida Memorial College in 1963, the school relocated to Miami-Dade County in 1968. Renamed Florida Memorial University in 2006, the institution now stands in Miami as a top producer of Black educators. Its Jacksonville roots survive at Matthew Gilbert Middle School.

    Jones College (1918-2017)


    Riverton Tower Senior Center is the former campus of Jones College. | Ennis Davis, AICP

    Founded in 1918 by Ann Harper Jones, Jones Business College began modestly in a private home with fewer than 50 students. Despite its humble start, the school quickly gained a reputation for excellence and became the first business college to feature a student dormitory. Its mission emphasized not only developing professional skills but also fostering ethical and responsible citizenship among its students.

    As the college grew, it expanded with an Orlando branch in 1953, followed by another in Riverside in 1970. The main campus, located in Arlington overlooking the St. Johns River, became an architectural landmark. It was constructed as a 12-story mid-century modern tower that housed classrooms, residence halls, a library, radio studios, and recreational amenities like a swimming pool and patio. The college’s radio stations, WKTZ and WFAM, added to its cultural footprint.

    However, after decades of service, Jones College lost its national accreditation in 2016, leading to its closure at the end of 2017. Remaining students were transferred to Keiser University to complete their studies. Nearly a century after its founding, the former main campus lives on as the Riverton Tower Senior Center, its walls still echoing the history of education and the story of opportunity built by Ann Harper Jones.

    Walker’s Commercial & Vocational College (1916-1970)


    Inside a Walker’s Business College classroom on Broad Street in LaVilla | State Archives of Florida

    In 1916, Dr. Julia S. Walker-Brown and her first husband, Richard Wendell Walker, founded Walker’s Business College in Jacksonville’s LaVilla neighborhood, across from the Masonic Temple on Broad Street. The school offered day and night classes designed to help veterans transition to civilian life. Known for its rigorous instruction in shorthand, bookkeeping, commercial law, and crafts such as flower and lamp shade making, it quickly grew in reputation. By 1922, it was renamed Walker’s National Business College and moved several times, including for two years at 610 West Duval Street, before eventually settling on Harrison Street in the Eastside.

    When Florida’s real estate bubble collapsed in 1926, the Walkers relocated to Macon, Georgia, where they reopened the college in 1929 on Cotton Avenue. After Richard’s death in the early 1930s, Julia returned to Jacksonville and reestablished the school as Walker’s Commercial College on Broad Street.

    In 1941, she married Lafayette A. Brown, who became the college’s vice president and a radio design technician. Renamed Walker’s Commercial & Vocational College, the school expanded to Durkeeville in 1950, offering courses from accounting to tailoring and radio repair. Under Dr. Walker-Brown’s leadership, it educated generations until closing in 1970. Her enduring legacy lives on through the surviving buildings in LaVilla and Durkeeville that once housed her pioneering institution.

    Editorial by Ennis Davis, AICP. Contact Ennis at edavis@moderncities.com

    Read the full article on the original site


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