Annie W. Holland: Founder of the Negro Parent-Teacher Association in N.C

0 Posted by - September 17, 2024 - BLACK WOMEN, LATEST POSTS

Annie Wealthy Holland, educator, was born in Isle of Wight County, Va., on a plot of land contiguous to the Wealthy plantation, where her grandmother had been a slave. Holland was named after Annie Wealthy, mistress of the Wealthy plantation.

At age sixteen, Holland completed her studies at the Isle of Wight county school. Afterwards her grandfather, Friday Daughtry, sent her to Hampton Institute, but his health failed and she never earned a diploma. She worked in New York City for a year as a nurse and later as a dressmaker, then returned home and earned a certificate to teach the second grade. In 1888,she married Willis B. Holland, an 1884 graduate of Hampton Institute who also became a teacher.

The records of Holland’s early career are sparse. In 1897, after teaching for nine years, she became assistant to her husband, then a school principal. In 1899, by choice, she left to teach in a rural school ten miles from her home, but returned to succeed her husband as principal in 1905. Around 1911, Holland became a teaching supervisor in North Carolina for the Jeanes Fund, a private trust founded to promote rural Negro education. She served first in Gates County, N.C., then in Chesapeake and Reynoldson counties, Va.

In 1915, Holland served as the Jeanes Fund’s state demonstration agent for North Carolina, which effectively made her the state supervisor of Negro elementary schools. This position was funded by the Jeanes Fund and the North Carolina Colored Teachers Association until it was incorporated into the state educational organization in 1921. Holland’s position involved constant travel to all North Carolina counties to conduct meetings, organize fund drives, and teach demonstration classes in every subject from reading to nutrition and sewing.

Holland is best known as the founder of the first Negro parent-teacher association in North Carolina, which held its first meeting at Shaw University on 14 Apr. 1928. Her husband, Willis, died in Franklin, Va., in 1925. She died nine years later, during a speaking engagement In 1938, on the tenth anniversary of the founding of the North Carolina Congress of Colored Parents and Teachers, the exercises of the annual meeting included the planting of a tree at Shaw University in Holland’s memory.

 

source:

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/holland-annie

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