The Rosenwald Schools The Remarkable Story of Collaboration in the Face of Adversity
The Pearl Escape Project
Panel & Discussion with
Eugene Robinson, Alumnus & Moderator
Stephanie Deutsch, Author
Aviva Kempner, Filmmaker
Vyllorya Evans, Daughter of Rosenwald Teachers
Doris Dearing Johnson, Rosenwald Alumna
February 19, 2026
400 I St. SW
The story of the Rosenwald Schools is largely absent from American history textbooks. During the Jim Crow era between 1913 and 1932, when African American children were routinely denied education, especially in the South, philanthropist Julius Rosenwald, in collaboration with the great African American educator, Booker T. Washington, helped establish more than 5,000 schools in rural towns and smaller cities across the South.
This amazing and unsung initiative educated over 600,000 children. Among the students were Maya Angelou, John Lewis, and Alice Walker.