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Southern University — A&M College
Civil Rights· 1880· North Baton Rouge

Southern University — A&M College

In 1880, three African-American legislators at Louisiana's constitutional convention—P. B. S. Pinchback, Theophile T. Allain, and Henry Demas—proposed founding a college "for the education of persons of color." The General Assembly chartered Southern University for Colored Students that year, and it opened in New Orleans the following March with twelve students, meeting at the former Israel Sinai Temple on Calliope Street. In 1890, the legislature designated Southern as a land-grant college for blacks, adding an Agricultural and Mechanical department to satisfy federal requirements while maintaining segregated higher education. In 1914, the university moved from Uptown New Orleans to Scotlandville, just north of Baton Rouge, settling on Scott's Bluff above the Mississippi River. Joseph Samuel Clark, an African-American leader from Baton Rouge who had led Baton Rouge College and the Louisiana Colored Teachers Association, became the college's first president after the move. A 1921 constitutional convention authorized reorganization and expansion; under Clark's continued leadership, enrollment grew from forty-seven to five hundred students. His son, Felton Grandison Clark, later became president and oversaw three decades of expansion—building thirty-three of the university's current buildings and growing enrollment to nearly ten thousand by the end of his tenure. In 1946, LSU Law School refused to admit Charles J. Hatfield III, an African-American college graduate who filed suit to gain professional education in the state. A special Louisiana Convention established a law program at Southern in 1947. F. G. Clark later founded affiliated centers in New Orleans and Shreveport; the legislature incorporated them into the Southern University System in 1974. On November 16, 1972, during a second day of student protests demanding inclusion in administrative decisions, Denver Smith and Leonard Brown were shot outside the Old Auditorium with buckshot—the same ammunition the sheriff's deputies carried. The murders have never been solved. Governor Edwin Edwards ordered the campus temporarily closed and patrolled by troops. The deaths galvanized a generation; the students are memorialized in the name of the campus union. Between 1970 and 1990, Southern consistently enrolled over ten thousand students and became the nation's largest HBCU—a distinction it still holds. It remains the only HBCU that is simultaneously a land-grant institution with a law school. In 2021, it attained R2 Carnegie Classification for high research activity, the first HBCU in Louisiana to reach that tier. The campus sits on a dramatic bluff above the Mississippi River with some of the best river views in the city. Lake Kernan flows through the center of campus. The Smith-Brown Memorial Union houses six food outlets, twelve bowling lanes, a game room, an art gallery, a ballroom, and offices for student organizations. The John B. Cade Library contains over a million volumes; its third floor houses the Camille Shade African-American Heritage Collection. The Human Jukebox marching band, representing Southern since 1947, has performed at six Super Bowls, presidential inaugurations, and the Rose Parade. In 2008, USA Today named it the number-one band in the nation. Campus is open to visitors. Start at the Smith-Brown Memorial Union or the archives in Cade Library. The bluff overlooks the working river—the same strategic site that made Baton Rouge defensible, the same river that carried goods and people north from the Gulf. Southern's story is part of the larger arc: what Black Louisianans built when the state would not let them through the front door.

Quick facts
  • ·Founded in 1880, Southern University is the largest HBCU in the United States by enrollment.
  • ·The only HBCU in America that is simultaneously a land-grant institution with a law school.
  • ·Students staged sit-ins at downtown Baton Rouge lunch counters in the early 1960s, making SU a key institution in Louisiana's civil rights movement.
  • ·The Human Jukebox marching band is considered one of the finest in the country and regularly performs at national events.
  • ·The campus sits on a dramatic bluff above the Mississippi River with some of the best river views in the city.
  • ·Campus is open to visitors. The Smith-Brown Memorial Student Union and the archives in John B. Cade Library are the best starting points.

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