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  2. New Orleans school desegregation crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Orleans_school...

    The New Orleans school desegregation crisis was a period of intense public resistance in New Orleans that followed the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Brown v. Board of Education that racial segregation of public schools was unconstitutional. The conflict peaked when U.S. Circuit Judge J. Skelly Wright ordered desegregation in New Orleans to ...

  3. Herzing University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herzing_University

    Herzing University is a private, non-profit university with multiple locations throughout the United States, including an Online division. The university offers associate, bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees in addition to certificates and diplomas across several key program areas, including nursing and healthcare, behavioral health, business, and technology.

  4. Gilbert Academy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_Academy

    Gilbert Academy. / 29.927; -90.112. Gilbert Academy was a premier preparatory school for African-American high school students in New Orleans, Louisiana. Begun in 1863 in New Orleans as a home for colored children orphaned by the American Civil War, the home moved to Baldwin, Louisiana, in 1867. The Orphans Home evolved into a school and, over ...

  5. Samuel Read Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Read_Hall

    Educator, pastor. Years active. 1814–1875. Known for. Leader in school reform movement. Samuel Read Hall (October 27, 1795 – June 24, 1877) was an American educator.

  6. Orleans Parish School Board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orleans_Parish_School_Board

    Orleans Parish School Board. / 29.928789; -90.020757  ( District office) The Orleans Parish School Board (OPSB), branded as NOLA Public Schools, governs the public school system that serves New Orleans, Louisiana. It includes the entirety of Orleans Parish, coterminous with New Orleans.

  7. Institute Catholique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_Catholique

    Institute Catholique. The Institute Catholique, also known as L'Institut Catholique des orphelins indigents (Catholic Institute for Indigent Orphans) and the Couvent School, was a Catholic school founded in New Orleans in 1840. It mainly served the non-orphan children of free people of color, who paid a modest tuition, and was founded with ...

  8. Leslie Jacobs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Jacobs

    Leslie Rosenthal Jacobs (born 1959, New Orleans, Louisiana) is an education reform advocate, business executive, and philanthropist.Born in New Orleans and a graduate of Cornell University, she built her family's small, independent insurance agency into one of the largest in the South, before merging the Rosenthal Agency with Hibernia National Bank (now Capital One).

  9. Eleanor McMain Secondary School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Eleanor_McMain_Secondary_School

    The school was named in honor of New Orleans social activist Eleanor McMain. It opened in 1932 originally as an all-girls school. [4][5] It became a coeducational junior high school in 1952, and a coeducational secondary with a magnet program in 1974. It later became an all-magnet school.