Manchester Sets Dedication Of Building In Honor Of First Black Students
April 20, 2022 at 4:06 p.m.
By Staff Report-
It is May 2 on the North Manchester campus.
The observance begins with a celebration paying tribute to the Cunninghams and their descendants. The program at 11 a.m. in Cordier Auditorium includes family representative Germar Reed and a historian who has written about the Cunninghams, Nicholas Patler. The presentation, part of the Values, Ideas and the Arts series at Manchester, is free and open to the public, according to a news release from Manchester University.
It will be followed immediately by a public ribbon-cutting ceremony on East Street at what is now called the Academic Center. Signage on the building will be changed to the Martha Cunningham and Joseph Cunningham Academic Center, and a new timeline inside will reflect the siblings' life and times.
Siblings who grew up near Kokomo, the Cunninghams started at Manchester in 1900, Joseph in the preparatory school and Mattie in the Bible School.
Martha "Mattie" Cunningham Dolby spent the early part of her career working to improve the lives of impoverished Black families in the segregated South. Having spent much of her childhood in the Church of the Brethren, she worked to establish a congregation in Arkansas and reviving one in the Midwest. In 1911, she became the first woman to be installed as a minister in the denomination.
Joseph Cunningham completed the Manchester normal English program - a course designed as professional training for teachers that offered a solid base in mathematics, science, language, history and pedagogy - in 1903 and continued the following year with a program in elocution. He went on to become a physician and lived in Chicago.
The early 1900s were a time of intense racial violence and bigotry in the United States. The Cunninghams leave a legacy of tenacity, courage and achievement in the face of systematic oppression, stated the release.
"I can think of no better way for Manchester to honor the Cunninghams than to name a hall of learning for them," said Manchester President Dave McFadden.
A luncheon for invited guests will follow the public festivities. Manchester is expecting at least 20 descendants of the Cunninghams to attend the dedication.
People can view it online at http://manchester.meritpages.com/news/Manchester-sets-dedication-of-building-in-honor-of-first-Black-students/26623.
It is May 2 on the North Manchester campus.
The observance begins with a celebration paying tribute to the Cunninghams and their descendants. The program at 11 a.m. in Cordier Auditorium includes family representative Germar Reed and a historian who has written about the Cunninghams, Nicholas Patler. The presentation, part of the Values, Ideas and the Arts series at Manchester, is free and open to the public, according to a news release from Manchester University.
It will be followed immediately by a public ribbon-cutting ceremony on East Street at what is now called the Academic Center. Signage on the building will be changed to the Martha Cunningham and Joseph Cunningham Academic Center, and a new timeline inside will reflect the siblings' life and times.
Siblings who grew up near Kokomo, the Cunninghams started at Manchester in 1900, Joseph in the preparatory school and Mattie in the Bible School.
Martha "Mattie" Cunningham Dolby spent the early part of her career working to improve the lives of impoverished Black families in the segregated South. Having spent much of her childhood in the Church of the Brethren, she worked to establish a congregation in Arkansas and reviving one in the Midwest. In 1911, she became the first woman to be installed as a minister in the denomination.
Joseph Cunningham completed the Manchester normal English program - a course designed as professional training for teachers that offered a solid base in mathematics, science, language, history and pedagogy - in 1903 and continued the following year with a program in elocution. He went on to become a physician and lived in Chicago.
The early 1900s were a time of intense racial violence and bigotry in the United States. The Cunninghams leave a legacy of tenacity, courage and achievement in the face of systematic oppression, stated the release.
"I can think of no better way for Manchester to honor the Cunninghams than to name a hall of learning for them," said Manchester President Dave McFadden.
A luncheon for invited guests will follow the public festivities. Manchester is expecting at least 20 descendants of the Cunninghams to attend the dedication.
People can view it online at http://manchester.meritpages.com/news/Manchester-sets-dedication-of-building-in-honor-of-first-Black-students/26623.
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