HISTORY

How Freedom Schools in Florida Echo The Past

Freedom schools today are a lot like those created in response to anti-literacy laws.

Allison Wiltz M.S.
Momentum
Published in
5 min readSep 18, 2023

--

Woman writing on notebook | Photo by RF._.studio via Pexels

Not every racist carries a noose. Some carry pens, pencils, and a briefcase. While we often discuss the violent manifestation of racist beliefs, many prefer to codify their bigoted worldview into laws and policies. For instance, between 1740 and 1834, states like Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Virginia, and North and South Carolina passed anti-literacy laws making it illegal for Black people to read and write or for others to teach them. This anti-literacy campaign sought to stifle any hope of progress for early Black Americans. The irony shouldn’t be lost on history students that White Southerners wanted to have their cake and eat it, too, endorsing a myth that Black people were intellectually inferior while depriving them of an opportunity to learn. To them, the image of a Black person with a book in hand was just as terrifying as someone holding a loaded gun, maybe even more so. A state militia could easily overcome a few men with guns, but an idea wouldn’t fall as easily.

“Masters are generally opposed to their negroes being educated,” editors wrote in the American Anti-Slavery Almanac for 1836. The inhumanity of the chattel slavery system permitted…

--

--

Allison Wiltz M.S.
Momentum

Black womanist scholar and doctoral candidate from New Orleans, LA with bylines @ Momentum, Oprah Daily, ZORA, Cultured #WEOC Founder. allisonthedailywriter.com