Career
She was principal of the Haines Institute for Industrial and Normal Education for 50 years. Lucy Craft Laney was selected by Governor Jimmy Carter in 1974 to be one of the first African Americans to have their portraits hung in the Georgia State Capitol. She was in Macon, Georgia, on April 13, 1854, eleven years before the slavery ended.
She was the seventh of ten children born to Louisa and David Laney during slavery.
At the time of her birth it was illegal for blacks to read. However with the assistance of Mississippi
Campbell, the slave owner’s sister, she learned to read at age four. She attended a mission school run by the American Medical Association. In 1869 she entered Atlanta University (later Clark Atlanta University), where she prepared to be a teacher.
Laney worked as a teacher in Macon, Milledgeville and Savannah, Georgia for ten years before deciding to open a school of her own.
Due to health reasons, she settled in Augusta, Georgia and founded the first school for black children. Her first class in 1883 was six children but Laney attracted interest in the community and, by the end of the second year, the school had 234 students. With the increase in students, she needed more funding for her operation.
One of the attendees, Francine East.H. Haines, later declared an interest in and donated $10,000 to Laney for the school.
With this money, Laney expanded her offerings. She changed the school"s name to The Haines Normal and Industrial Institute in honor of her benefactor and to indicate its goals of industrial and teacher training.
The school eventually grew to encompass an entire city block of buildings. By 1928, the school"s enrollment was over 800 students.
Laney also opened the first black kindergarten and the first black nursing school in Augusta.
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She died on October 24, 1933, and is buried at Cedar Grove Cemetery in Augusta.