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Virginia Randolph - Wikipedia Virginia Estelle Randolph (May 1870 – March 16, 1958) was an American educator in Henrico County, Virginia [1] She was named the United States' first "Jeanes Supervising Industrial Teacher" by her Superintendent of Schools, Jackson Davis , [ 2 ] and she led a program funded by the Jeanes Foundation to upgrade vocational training throughout
Virginia Estelle Randolph (1870–1958) Virginia Estelle Randolph, born of formerly enslaved parents in Richmond, was a pioneering educator, community health advocate, organizational leader, and humanitarian Educated within the public schools of Richmond, Randolph embarked on a career in education that spanned nearly sixty years
Virginia E Randolph - Henrico County, Virginia Virginia E Randolph May 1870 — March 16, 1958 Mountain Road School Virginia Estelle Randolph was born in Richmond, Virginia, in May 1870, and was the second of four children to formerly enslaved parents She attended Baker School, the first public school for black students in Richmond
Randolph family of Virginia - Wikipedia The Randolph family of Virginia is a prominent political family, whose members contributed to the politics of Colonial Virginia and Virginia after it established statehood in June 1788, following the American Revolutionary War
Virginia E. Randolph, Teaching Pioneer born - African American Registry Virginia Randolph was born on this date in 1874 She was a Black educator, social worker, and humanitarian Born near Richmond, VA, Virginia, Estelle Randolph was the daughter of former slaves Sarah Elizabeth Carter and Edward Nelson Randolph
The Virginia Randolph Foundation, Inc. Virginia Estelle Randolph, a daughter of slave parents, began teaching in Henrico County in 1892 From her beginnings as a teacher in a one room school house on the Old Mountain Road, Miss Randolph became nationally recognized as a pioneer educator, humanitarian and leader in the field of education
Randolph, Virginia - Wikipedia Randolph, formerly called Roanoke and Talcott, is a small unincorporated community in Charlotte County, Virginia, United States, near the Staunton River Its elevation is 354 feet (108 m) The community is the home of Staunton River Battlefield State Park
Virginia Randolph Cottage - DHR The brick Virginia Randolph Cottage honors an African American woman who gained national repute as an educator In 1908, Henrico County instructor Virginia Estell Randolph (1874-1958) was appointed the nation’s first Jeanes supervising industrial teacher
Randolph, Virginia (1874–1958) - Encyclopedia. com Randolph, Virginia (1874–1958)African-American educator and social worker Name variations: Virginia E Randolph Born Virginia Estelle Randolph in Richmond, Virginia, on June 6, 1874 (some sources erroneously cite 1870); died on March 16, 1958; daughter of former slaves Nelson and Sarah Elizabeth Randolph; educated at the Bacon School and
Virginia Estelle Randolph - The Historical Marker Database The daughter of parents born in slavery, Virginia Randolph (1874-1958) taught in a one-room schoolhouse beginning in 1892 (A historical marker located in Glen Allen in Henrico County, Virginia )