[89] Rev. Statutes of Mo. 1879, Vol. II, p. 1861.
[90] In this period a very noteworthy step was taken by the Negro teachers. In 1878 they organized a State teachers' association. In that year its meeting was held in Columbia, Missouri, and a number of professors in the State University took an active part. The next year the Association met in Jefferson City. Since that time, the meeting of the Association has become an annual affair.
[91] DuBois, Negro Common School, p. 61.
[92] Rev. Statutes of Mo., 1889, p. 2271.
[93] Ibid., 1909, p. 790.
[94] DuBois, Negro Common School, p. 61.
[95] Ibid.
[96] Report of Supt. of Schools, 1910, p. 69.
[97] Report St. Louis Board of Education, 1916, p. 302.
[98] Ibid., p. 350.