Lincoln High School (Gainesville, Florida)
Lincoln High School was a public high school for African American students in Gainesville, Florida during the segregation era. It replaced the Union Academy, founded with support from the Freedmen's Bureau in 1867. Lincoln High School was built in 1923 at Northwest 7th Avenue. When it was first constructed it only served grades 1–11, but the principal A. Quinn Jones campaigned for it to serve through grade 12 so students could graduate with diplomas and continue on to attend college or universities. In 1926, Jones succeeded in persuading the county board, and Lincoln High School became the second fully accredited African-American High School in the state of Florida. The A. Quinn Jones House is preserved as a museum honoring his legacy. A new school was built for Lincoln High School in 1956 in response to the Supreme Court of the United States decision in the case of Brown v. Board of Education calling for an end to segregation. Instead of integrating the county built an "equal" school for blacks at SE 12 Street, what is now Lincoln Middle School. The original 1923 Lincoln High School building is now the A. Quinn Jones Center.
Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lincoln High School (Gainesville, Florida) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).Lincoln High School (Gainesville, Florida)
Northwest 7th Avenue, Gainesville
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)
Latitude | Longitude |
---|---|
N 29.658 ° | E -82.3354 ° |
Address
A Quinn Jones Center
Northwest 7th Avenue 1108
32601 Gainesville
Florida, United States
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