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schools
Early schools of the small, private, or "subscription," type operated under
primitive conditions with inadequate supplies. Tuition was often paid in agricultural
produce such as tobacco, which was considered legal tender. Some school buildings were
used also as church houses. Even after public education was established in 1830, private
academies flourished, patronized by wealthier families who scorned the public or so-called
"pauper" schools.
One private academy is particularly
noteworthy: Madison Female Institute. When it was incorporated in 1858, a large brick
residence located on a hilltop south of downtown Richmond was enlarged to accommodate the
school, and ten acres were divided into lawns, gardens, and tennis courts. Following the
Civil War battle of Richmond in 1862, the building served briefly as a Union army hospital
where teachers and students helped care for the wounded. Madison Female Institute
attracted students from all over the South and became famous as a finishing school. The
property was leased in 1919 to the City Board of Education for ninety-nine years; today,
it is the location of Madison Middle School.
In 1939 Model School of Eastern Kentucky State Teachers College merged with Madison
High School. The merged schools remained until 1962. In the 1960s in response to federal
court rulings the old black high school in Richmond, Richmond High School, was merged with
Madison High School. In 1989 Madison High became Madison Middle School and high school
students went to Madison Central High School. In response to population increase Madison
Southern High School was created in the 1980s. Berea Independent School continues to be
the only independent public school in the county. |