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Dillard University

 Organization

Historical Note

Dillard University was formed in 1930 by the merger of two New Orleans church-sponsored colleges (Straight University and New Orleans University), which had been established during Reconstruction. Although primarily a liberal arts institution, Dillard also historically emphasized training in the areas of teaching and nursing, and maintained the Flint-Goodridge Hospital.

Straight University was founded by the AMA in 1869 as a non-sectarian school open to all, but particularly for the benefit of freedmen following the Civil War. Seymour Straight, its major patron, was a prominent New Orleans Radical Republican and businessman. The University’s major graduates in law and medicine were able to practice in Louisiana without further examination. An arsonist burned down the University at its Esplanade Avenue location in 1877, and the following year a new central building, Straight Hall, was constructed on Canal Street, which also burned down in 1892.

Boys’ and girls’ dormitories were constructed on the campus of Straight University from 1881 to 1883. Under President Oscar E. Atwood, the University emphasized manual and teacher training, while the law school was discontinued in 1890. In 1908, the AMA reclassified Straight University as a secondary school after having closed the theological department three years earlier. Under President Elbert M. Stevens, the University was renamed Straight College. It continued its teacher-training work, but at the college level.

During the same year that Straight University was founded, Union Normal School, another school open to all but aimed at the freedmen, was incorporated by the Freedmen’s Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church as a teacher-training school. In 1873, Union Normal School, the Thomson Biblical Institute in New Orleans, and Thomson University in Bayou Teche were consolidated by the Freedmen’s Aid Society to form New Orleans University. Under President L. G. Adkinson, the University began emphasizing manual training in 1885.

The school opened a medical department on Canal Street near Charity Hospital in 1889, due to the refusal of the hospital to allow African American students the opportunity for internships. New Orleans University graduated its first medical class in 1892, and the school established the John D. Flint Medical College and the Sarah Goodridge Hospital and Nurse-Training School in 1899. Flint Medical College closed in 1911 after losing certification by the American Medical Association. The buildings, which had been used jointly by the Flint Medical College and the Sarah Goodridge Hospital since 1901, were converted into a 50 bed hospital and the name changed to Flint-Goodridge Hosptial. During that decade, New Orleans University’s name was changed to New Orleans College.

During the 1920s, President James P. O’Brien expanded enrollment at Straight University, increased the number of male teachers, initiated a football program, and emphasized the sciences. He phased out the primary and secondary grades in 1929. He also established relationships with the U.S. Bureau of Education and various charitable foundations from 1926 to 1929, paving the way for long-term expansion and the merger with New Orleans College. O. E. Kriege became the last president of New Orleans College in 1925.

Dillard University was chartered in 1930. James P. O’Brien died and was replaced by Charles B. Austin the following year. Flint-Goodridge Hospital moved to a new location in 1932 with Albert W. Dent as Superintendent. Straight College and New Orleans College officially closed in 1935, and were replaced by Dillard University with Will W. Alexander as acting President and Dent as Business Manager. William Stuart Nelson later became the first President of the university.

After surviving a national personnel search resulting from his questionable reputation within the New Orleans African American community, Albert Dent became president in 1941. He inaugurated a High School Principals’ Workshop in 1945, and closed Gilbert Academy, formerly the secondary school of New Orleans College in 1949. During Dent’s tenure, Edgar B. Stern Hall, devoted to the sciences, was constructed in 1953, as was the Lawless Memorial Chapel in 1956. A pre-freshman program was started in 1959, Flint-Goodridge Hospital was expanded in 1960, and the Will W. Alexander Library was completed in 1961. Dent resigned as president in 1969. Two years later, Dillard’s athletic facility, Dent Hall, was constructed.

Abstract:

American Missionary Association archives 1969 addendum.

"The History of Flint-Goodridge Hospital of Dillard University. "Journal of the National Medical Association, 61:6 (November 1969), pp. 533-536.

Found in 5 Collections and/or Records:

Matthew Simpson Davage papers

 Collection
Identifier: 112
Content Description

The papers of Matthew S. Davage contains sermons, addresses, reports, clippings, pamphlets, honors and a single letter from Dr. Benjamin E. Mays. A report for 1950-1951 for the Department of Higher Education for Negroes of the Methodist Church when Davage headed that department is present. Several of the speeches are on African Americans, the Methodist Church, race relations, and one on Abraham Lincoln.

Dates: Other: 1948-1963

Dent Family papers addendum

 Collection
Identifier: 116-01
Scope and Contents The addendum to the papers of Albert Walter Dent (1904-1984) and Ernestine Jessie Covington Dent (1904-2001) provides a rich source of documentation of a prominent African American family, and covers topics such as education, healthcare, musical traditions and culture in New Orleans, Louisiana, and Houston, Texas. The papers consist of 38 linear feet of personal and collected papers of both individuals and other Covington-Dent family members. The addition to the papers is comprised of...
Dates: 1890-2001, undated

Dent Family papers addendum

 Collection
Identifier: 116-2
Scope and Contents This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services award MH-245560-OMS-20. Content Description The Dent Family papers addendum include the personal, professional, and collected papers of Albert Walter Dent (1904-1984) and Ernestine Jessie Covington Dent (1904-2001). The papers break down into six series: the papers of Albert Walter Dent, the papers of Ernestine Jessie Covington Dent, images, ephemera,...
Dates: Other: 1948-2010

Lucile L. Hutton papers

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: 191
Scope and Contents

The papers of Lucile Levy Hutton occupy 7.8 linear feet of shelf space and cover not only her career in public education; but also chronicle her vigorous participation in civic, religious, and cultural activities. Correspondence (1890-1988) has been kept with related material where it was generated and therefore may be found in six of the ten series. The papers are arranged chronologically within each category.

Dates: Created: 1850-1988; Other: Date acquired: 01/01/1989

Fannie C. Williams papers

 Collection
Identifier: 392
Scope and Contents The papers of Fannie C. Williams encompass 1.8 linear feet and reflect her career and life commitment to African American education and work with young people in New Orleans, most notably between 1908 and 1954, when she served as a teacher and principal in the New Orleans public school system. Overall, the collection is a valuable resource for the topics of African American education, the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA) in New Orleans, as well as youth and community development....
Dates: Created: 1882-1980; Other: Date acquired: 02/01/1972