In the years immediately following the Civil War--the formative
years for an emerging society of freed African Americans in
Mississippi--there was much debate over the general purpose of
black schools and who would control them.
From Cotton Field to
Schoolhouse is the first comprehensive examination of
Mississippi's politics and policies of postwar racial
education.
The primary debate centered on whether schools for African
Americans (mostly freedpeople) should seek to develop blacks as
citizens, train them to be free but subordinate laborers, or
produce some other outcome. African Americans envisioned schools
established by and for themselves as a primary means of achieving
independence, equality, political empowerment, and some degree of
social and economic mobility--in essence, full citizenship. Most
northerners assisting freedpeople regarded such expectations as
unrealistic and expected African Americans to labor under contract
for those who had previously enslaved them and their families.
Meanwhile, many white Mississippians objected to any educational
opportunities for the former slaves. Christopher Span finds that
newly freed slaves made heroic efforts to participate in their own
education, but too often the schooling was used to control and
redirect the aspirations of the newly freed.