Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. By that first graduation, Peter Clark had placed forty students as teachers in Cincinnati and elsewhere, many of them before graduation. After a burst of ten mostly older graduates, in 1870 and 1871, classes grew steadily from a few most years in the mid 1870 to seven to ten in the late ‘70s and early 80s, and more than a dozen every year from 1885.

  2. Mar 12, 2013 · The Cincinnati Commercial Gazette and the Cleveland Gazette reported in early April 1886 that Peter Clark had been offered a position as the principal of a ward school and high school in Kansas City—even before he was terminated as the principal of the Colored Schools in Cincinnati.

  3. Feb 23, 2017 · Peter H. Clark, principal of Cincinnati's first African American high school, was a leader of the black community. Blink 2024 may have set new attendance record, ride data and restaurateurs suggest.

  4. Cincinnati native Consuelo Clark earned an MD in 1884 from the Boston University School of Medicine. ... Black Walnut Hills resident Peter Clark wrote the earliest ...

  5. First Baptist Church of Walnut Hills is an historically Black Church in the Walnut Hills neighborhood of Cincinnati. The congregation traces its roots before the Civil War; the current brick building was constructed by the Black congregation beginning in 1908, with a 500-seat sanctuary. The church is situated on the southeast corner of Lincoln ...

  6. Born March 29, 1829, in Cincinnati, Ohio, Peter Humphries Clark was the son of Michael Clark and Ann Humphries, making him the grandson of Elizabeth Clark Gaines. Unfortunately, Peter Clark’s mother died in 1833 due to cholera. By the time Clark was born, both of his parents were free individuals of mixed racial heritage in the Cincinnati area.

  7. Jan 6, 2006 · The Clark family returned to Cincinnati in 1857 when Clark was re-hired by the newly-empowered black trustees of the colored schools and made principal of the Western District School. Although he continued his abolitionist activities, and kept up his close relationship with Douglass until the latter’s death in 1895, his work as an educator quickly became his major preoccupation.

  1. People also search for