There’s a moment in Ralph James’s story that stays with you. A retired municipal judge, now in his seventies, sitting at a restored school desk in rural South Carolina — the same desk, more or less, where he learned to read in a segregated classroom nearly seven decades ago. He recalls the Christmas pageant, the tall windows, and the bell. He’s spent the last ten years raising over two million dollars to restore the building. The school is now known as a Rosenwald School, a name that most Americans are still unfamiliar with.
Julius Rosenwald was born in Springfield, Illinois in 1862, one block from Abraham Lincoln’s own home — a detail that feels almost too symbolic to be real. The son of German-Jewish immigrants, he dropped out of high school, apprenticed in the garment trade, and eventually bought into a struggling mail-order company called Sears, Roebuck. One of the most notable business revolutions in American history ensued. He streamlined operations, built a warehouse so efficient that Henry Ford reportedly visited and took notes, and turned Sears into what might reasonably be called the Amazon of the early twentieth century. Rosenwald, one of the richest men in the nation, served as its president by 1908.
The part that usually surprises people is what he did next. Instead of building monuments to himself, he started giving the money away — methodically, strategically, and with a kind of moral urgency that seems almost unusual for someone that rich. His rabbi in Chicago, Emil Hirsch, had long preached that wealth wasn’t a reward so much as a responsibility. By all accounts, Rosenwald genuinely thought so.
His attention turned to Black Americans in the South after reading Booker T. Washington’s Up From Slavery. His 1911 visit to Tuskegee left a lasting impression. In some Southern states, the annual cost of educating a white child was ten times higher than that of a black child. In 1927, South Carolina spent $14.9 million on white students and only $1.7 million on Black students. If there were any schools for Black children, they were usually unheated structures with inexperienced teachers and, if families were fortunate, three months of instruction per year. It’s difficult to read those figures without experiencing something akin to fury.
Together, Rosenwald and Washington came up with a clever and generous plan. The local Black community had to raise the remaining funds, frequently through labor, church fundraisers, and land donations, while Rosenwald would cover about half of the building costs of each new school. After that, white local governments had to consent to keep the schools open. It was a framework intended to foster accountability and ownership at all levels, and it was successful. Between 1913 and the mid-1930s, nearly 5,000 schools, shops, and teacher homes were built across 15 Southern states, educating around 650,000 Black children — roughly one in three Black young people in the country at the time.
The list of alumni reads like a survey of American culture in the 20th century. Maya Angelou. Ralph Bunche, the Nobel Peace Prize winner, and John Lewis. Hughes, Langston. Hurston, Zora Neale. Marian Anderson, whose voice Toscanini supposedly referred to as “once in a hundred.” The legal arguments in Brown v. Board of Education were directly influenced by at least seven Rosenwald Fellows. The Civil Rights movement itself might look very different in the absence of those schools—it might be slower, less intellectually prepared, and devoid of some of its most important voices.

After donating what would be about $500 million in today’s dollars to support Black welfare and education, Rosenwald passed away in 1932. He contributed an equal amount to other causes, such as the construction of Chicago’s Museum of Science and Industry. No endowment was left by him. Because he thought that current needs were more important than future legacies, he explicitly directed that all funds in the Rosenwald Foundation be used within 25 years of his passing. That seems almost paradoxical—a wealthy man actively fending off the desire to live forever. He genuinely didn’t seem to give a damn about the monument. The schools were important to him.
There is currently a national park initiative. In response to a request from Congress, the National Park Service is researching the possibility of creating a Julius Rosenwald National Historical Park, complete with a visitors center in Chicago and multiple preserved school buildings throughout the South. As these things frequently do, it is unclear if that endeavor will proceed with actual funding and urgency. However, at least the discussion is taking place. Community centers are emerging from the foundations of former schoolhouses, restorations are taking place in South Carolina and other places, and historians are quietly arguing that this story should be included in the main text of American history rather than the footnotes.
Observing all of this gives the impression that America is only now starting to face what it nearly allowed to vanish: a record of what individual kindness, moral conviction, and intercultural cooperation truly accomplished when the government did nothing. By waiting for legislation, Julius Rosenwald failed to save Black education in the Jim Crow South. He built the schools himself, one county at a time, and trusted that the people who needed them most would meet him halfway. The majority of them did.
