Advertisement

Ernest H. Anderson

Advertisement

Ernest H. Anderson

Birth
Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, USA
Death
29 Oct 1885 (aged 35)
Prairie View, Waller County, Texas, USA
Burial
Austin, Travis County, Texas, USA GPS-Latitude: 30.2773781, Longitude: -97.7274246
Plot
Sec. 4, lot 94
Memorial ID
View Source
Son of Henry Willis Anderson and Henrietta Cosset. Professor Anderson died from tuberculosis. His obituary in The Austin Daily Statesman says he was a native Texan but graduated from Fisk University in Nashville. It also noted that he died in Austin residence at 1100 Olive Street.

--------

ANDERSON, E. H. (1850–1885). E. H. Anderson, black college president, was born on September 2, 1850, in Memphis, Tennessee. He was a graduate of Fisk University and was trained for the Methodist ministry. He moved to Texas to head Prairie View Normal School, established in 1879 as a school to train black teachers (see PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY). During his tenure Prairie View experienced severe financial hardships as the Sixteenth and Seventeenth legislatures debated over the constitutionality and the funding of the school. The school, with fifty students, was overcrowded and did not have a fixed course of study, but toward the end of Anderson's tenure he was optimistic at the support of the black communities around the state. Anderson died at Prairie View on October 29, 1885. He was succeeded by his brother, Laurine Cecil Anderson, who had served as his first assistant.

http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fan57
Son of Henry Willis Anderson and Henrietta Cosset. Professor Anderson died from tuberculosis. His obituary in The Austin Daily Statesman says he was a native Texan but graduated from Fisk University in Nashville. It also noted that he died in Austin residence at 1100 Olive Street.

--------

ANDERSON, E. H. (1850–1885). E. H. Anderson, black college president, was born on September 2, 1850, in Memphis, Tennessee. He was a graduate of Fisk University and was trained for the Methodist ministry. He moved to Texas to head Prairie View Normal School, established in 1879 as a school to train black teachers (see PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY). During his tenure Prairie View experienced severe financial hardships as the Sixteenth and Seventeenth legislatures debated over the constitutionality and the funding of the school. The school, with fifty students, was overcrowded and did not have a fixed course of study, but toward the end of Anderson's tenure he was optimistic at the support of the black communities around the state. Anderson died at Prairie View on October 29, 1885. He was succeeded by his brother, Laurine Cecil Anderson, who had served as his first assistant.

http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fan57

Inscription

Sacred to the memory of
E. H. Anderson
Our teacher and friend

Erected by his pupils.



Advertisement