Hineshaw Rosenwald School, 1931, Hinesville

Exterior view of the abandoned Hinesville Shaw Rosenwald School, featuring brick walls, boarded windows, and a damaged roof, surrounded by grass and trees.

Construction of the Hinesville Shaw Rosenwald School, as it was originally known, began in 1930 and was completed in 1931, fulfilling the goal of the Rosenwald Fund to provide state-of-the-art schools to black children in the segregated Jim Crow South who otherwise would not have had access to quality education. The Trustees of the Hinesville Colored Schools (Alonzo Simpson, J. H. Gause, and Robert Duggan) helped secure the local funding required to match the gift of the Rosenwald Fund.

Sign on the brick wall of Hineshaw Elementary School, displaying the school's name in weathered metal letters.

The Rosenwald School was originally a comprehensive facility housing grades 1-11. I’m unsure when it became an elementary school, but the addition of a wing to the original Rosenwald structure, and a later separate building, were likely constructed during the era of Equalization Schools (1950s). It has long been known as the Hineshaw School/Hineshaw Elementary School. Neighborhood resident and businesswoman Rebecca Hargrove Shipman sold property adjacent to the school for the nominal fee of $1 to ensure street access to the campus. Two of those streets bear her name today, Rebecca Street and Shipman Avenue. Trustee J. H. Gause was also honored with a street bearing his name.

Abandoned Hinesville Shaw Rosenwald School building, surrounded by overgrown vegetation and tall trees, showcasing its deteriorating condition.

The campus remained in use in one form or another until the early 2000s but has been abandoned for many years. Neglect and storm damage have endangered the building and immediate stabilization is needed. It has recently been announced that Hinesville Downtown Development Authority is planning to restore the Rosenwald School.

1 thought on “Hineshaw Rosenwald School, 1931, Hinesville

  1. Rafe Semmes's avatarRafe Semmes

    So glad to hear plans are underway to restore this building and make it available for another use! It is a shame that it took “outside folks” like the Rosenwald Fund to invest the monies necessary to educate our future residents and citizens, who were unfairly denied education simply because of their race. they then became more productive members of our communities, and all were served by their doing so.

    The Carnegie Foundation was equally instrumental in bringing libraries to many small communities who simply did not have the resources at the time to provide them.

    We are all much the richer for the vision, insight, and resources these organizations, and others like them, brought to improve our communities.

    Reply

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