Declined to See Him
This morning when Prof. Charles H. Moore, a colored man and
State Inspector of the colored schools and the agent for the Rosenwald fund
that is helping to build school buildings for colored children in this state,
and has spent some $1,500 on the school buildings of Wilson county was in the
office of County Superintendent Coon with other parties, Mr. Coon told Moore he
did not want to see him, and not to come in his office.
Prof. Moore, who has been connected with Tuskegee Institute
and was vice president of Colored Industrial School at Greensboro, gives us the
following version of the affair. He says that in connection with his work as
inspector of the colored schools of the state and as agent of the Rosenwald
fund together with Prof. Clinton J. Calloway, director of the Eastern
department of Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Ala., and Prof. Newbold, who is
also looking after the colored schools of the state, he came over here today to
inspect the colored schools of the county and the buildings which have been
erected with the aid of the Rosenwald fund.
Mr. Newbold said he made an appointment for ?? to see Mr.
Coon, and this morning before they met Mr. Newbold that he and Prof. Galloway
went to Mr. Coon’s office and when they ?? there they found Mr. Coon out. They
asked two gentlemen who were in the office if Messrs. Coon and Newbold were in
and receiving a reply in the negative, and that Mr. Coon was expected at any
moment, they set their valises down in a corner and remarked they would return
in a few moments. Starting out Moore espied Mr. Coon, and turning to Galloway
he remarked there is Mr. Coon now. Mr. Coon looked at him and said, “I don’t
care to see you,” and he added, “Furthermore, I want you to leave my office.”
Moore says that he replied, “All right,” and departed. Later
seeing Mr. Newbold he related the circumstances to him, and when Prof. Newbold
asked him to return to Prof. Coon’s office he declined so to do.
Later Prof. Newbold, Galloway and J.D. Reid went off in a
car on their inspection of the colored school buildings of the county.
Julius Rosenwald was a multimillionaire Jewish merchant and one of the founders of Sears, Roebuck and Company. He donated funds to the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama and set aside money that for 25 years was used to help build public schools in the South for Negro students. To read more about this work, see https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/rosenwald-fund-schools-1912-1932/
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Julius Rosenwald was a multimillionaire Jewish merchant and one of the founders of Sears, Roebuck and Company. He donated funds to the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama and set aside money that for 25 years was used to help build public schools in the South for Negro students. To read more about this work, see https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/rosenwald-fund-schools-1912-1932/
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