The years following the War Between the States
were difficult
times in Houston. The social changes brought about by the emancipation
of
the slaves presented challenges to the citizens of Houston for which no
one
was prepared. Few institutions or organizations of social welfare
existed
to adequately care for the large numbers of former slaves who migrated
into
the city in the late 1860's.
Fortunately, there were a few strong leaders who emerged from among the
African-American
community. One of these was John Henry (Jack) Yates. The 30-year-old
Jack
Yates helped to organize the Antioch Baptist Church, and he became its
first
pastor in 1868.
As the first generation of freed men and women adjusted to their new
way of
life, it became apparent to many of them that education was the key to
success.
In 1885, Jack Yates and other leading blacks established the Houston
Baptist
Academy. The school opened in rented facilities in the Third Ward, in a
residence
called the Cooper Place which was located at the corner of Bell Avenue
and
San Jacinto Street, a block south of the current South Texas College of
Law.

Within a decade, the success of the school prompted Reverend Yates to
reorganize
the Houston Baptist Academy as the Houston College, and, in 1894, he
relocated
the institution to a wooded, three acre tract of land beyond the
western limits
of Houston on the San Felipe Road. In spite of the name, the Houston
College
offered only courses in primary, secondary and industrial education.
Yet,
the school offered a special opportunity to the black children of the
community
who sought an alternative to the Colored High School of the public
school
system.
Even after the death of Jack Yates in 1897, the Houston College
operated for
another generation before its closure in 1921. Located in the modern
3200
block of West Dallas Avenue, the Houston College was on the north side
of
West Dallas Avenue between Dunlavy Street and Terrell Street. The
buildings
of the institution included a domestic science building, a laundry, a
boys
dormitory and a girls dormitory. An additional dormitory was located on
the
south side of West Dallas Avenue.
The spirit of educational opportunity that characterized the Houston
College
persisted even after the school closed. In 1927, the Houston Colored
Junior
College was established. In 1934, it was renamed the Houston College
for Negroes,
and by 1947, the institution had become the Texas State University of
Negroes.
Finally, in 1951, true to the legacy of Jack Yates, the college became
Texas
Southern University.
Today, as you paddle along Buffalo Bayou past the Shepherd Drive
bridge, nothing
of the former Houston College is visible. The tract of land, which is
desginated
as the Houston Baptist Academy Addition, is occupied by the Allen House
Apartments
on the south side of Allen Parkway. A small sliver of the original
tract
on the north side of Allen Parkway is the Adath Yeshurun Cemetery which
was
acquired by the Congregation Adath Yeshurun in 1895.
Jack Yates is buried, along with members of his family, in the College
Memorial
Park Cemetery which is located in the 3500 block of West Dallas Avenue,
immediately
west of the Houston College site for which it was named.