- Emancipation Oak
Emancipation Oak is a historic
tree located on the campus ofHampton University in what is now the City of Hampton, Virginia. (Elizabeth City County and the Town of Phoebus voted to consolidate with the City of Hampton in 1952). The large sprawling oak is 98 feet (30 m) in diameter, with branches which extend upward as well as laterally, as if offering refuge. It is designated one of the 10 Great Trees of the World by theNational Geographic Society and is part of theNational Historic Landmark district of Hampton University. The tree is a Live Oak ("Quercus virgiana").History
During the
American Civil War (1861 to 1865), nearbyFort Monroe remained in Union hands, and became a place of refuge for escapedAfrican American slaves seeking asylum. Prior to the Civil War, and following the slave rebellion led byNat Turner in 1831, Virginia law had been changed to prohibit the education of slaves. Nevertheless, in 1861, Mrs. Mary Smith Peake (1823 to 1862) taught children of former slaves under the tree, which was 3 miles outside of the protective safety of Fort Monroe, and held night classes for adults. In 1863, theVirginia Peninsula 's black community gathered under this tree to hear the first Southern reading of President Abraham Lincoln'sEmancipation Proclamation .After the conclusion of hostilities, also at this location, a school was founded in 1868 by General
Samuel C. Armstrong as Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute, a land grant school. From 1872 to 1875, one of its many students was the young son of a former slave by the name ofBooker T. Washington , who became a famous educator and later foundedTuskegee Institute and dozens of schools for African-American children across the south.Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute became
Hampton Institute in 1930 and gained University status in 1984, becomingHampton University . It is one of Virginia's major institutions of higher education. There, in the 21st century, the venerable Emancipation Oak still stands to provide both shelter and inspiration to the school's students and staff.
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