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(EDUCATION.) "Charter of the Institute for Colored Youth" with related ground rent documents.

(EDUCATION.) "Charter of the Institute for Colored Youth" with related ground rent documents. Printed pamphlet: 12 pages. 12mo, original printed wrappers, minimal wear; horizontal and vertical fold throughout. Philadelphia: Joseph & William Kite, 1844. Plus 11 related manuscript documents, various sizes, condition generally strong. Philadelphia, 1835-1855

  • Notes: This school was founded from an 1832 bequest by Philadelphia Quaker silversmith Richard Humphreys. It began operation in 1837 as the Institute for Colored Youth, the first high school for Black students in the United States. It was formally chartered in 1842, and became Cheyney University in 1913--giving it the earliest roots of any of America's HBCU's.

    The pamphlet offered here includes the Institute's charter, by-laws, 1844 annual report, and list of donors. Teacher training had not yet begun; the school's 14 students were on a farm, engaged in "knitting and sewing, and recently in the manufacture of corn brooms," with a sawmill planned on the school's creek. They also attended Quaker meetings. The school later took a step forward with a new Philadelphia building in 1852. Activist and baseball pioneer Octavius Catto would be an 1858 graduate. No copies of the pamphlet traced at auction, and only 2 in OCLC.

    Also included are 11 documents relating to the school's land investments, dated 1835-1855. In 1837, Institute managers Charles Roberts, George Williams, and Caspar Wistar purchased the ground rent rights to two adjacent parcels of land in downtown Philadelphia, at what became 150 and 152 North 9th Street. These lots generated $162 per year for the school. The documents include deeds dated 1835 and 1837; 3 title examination documents from 1837 and 1840 (one with an inset plat map of the property); receipts for rent payments; an 1839 letter from a tenant; and more. Two of the documents, a deed dated 1849 and its 1855 cover note, name the Institute for Colored Youth as owner.

    WITH--5 unrelated Philadelphia land documents from Mary Sandwith (1732-1815) and Benjamin Franklin French (1799-1877) dated 1809-1825 and found with the above.

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