Students at Prudence Crandall's School for
African-American Women, 1833-34
Courtesy, The Prudence Crandall Museum, Canterbury, CT
Detailed information about Prudence Crandall's life is widely available
(she was even named "Connecticut State Heroine" in 1995), but less
is known about the students who also
bravely confronted the racism of Canterbury's
opposition to the academy. These young
women, mostly from prosperous middle-class
families in major northeastern cities,
were committed to securing higher education
not only for themselves but for disenfranchised
African Americans in general. Many
of them went on to become educators
in their own right; others (including
Sarah Harris) became active leaders
in the abolitionist movement.
The stories
of more than half of the students remain
unknown, awaiting future historians'
detective work.