Thursday, August 30, 2018

History of Robertson Hill School in Austin, Texas explained and examined. (Revisited)

Robertson Hill School is one of the many forgotten schools of Austin, Texas from the 19th century and 20th century. Only old timers of Austin known about this school and history. Not many people today know about the history of this school. Robertson Hill School was home to both Robertson Hill Elementary School and Robertson Hill High School. The school itself was designated by Austin ISD as a “negro school”.


Austin Public Schools (now Austin ISD) allocated funds for a negro school to be built for black students living in East Austin in March 1883. Construction for this school to all summer to complete. At first, Robertson Hill School consisted of two rooms and later expanded to include four rooms inside of a two story building. It was a shotgun styled house.

Robertson Hill School opened on the southeast corner of 11th Street & San Marcos Street in 1883. Teachers taught students in grades 1 through 8 at Robertson Hill School during the first 5 years from 1883 to 1888. Hightower Theodore Kealing was the first principal of Robertson Hill School from 1883 to 1888. He served as a teacher was well.

Heating for Robertson Hill School was provided by old potbelly stoves. Janitors would come fill the old potbelly stoves with coal and they would get red-hot. This proved to be a fire hazard as the school burned on several occasions.

Tax records indicate that the school owned Lots 1-5 of Block 8 by 1885. (Ref: Austin City Lot Register 1885: 130).


This description of the Robertson Hill School by A. P. Wooldridge, superintendent of Austin Public Schools, was published in the Austin Daily Statesman in 1887.:

Our Public Schools: Their Condition and Their Wants.

“I said in my former article that the state of the colored schools "was a condition rather than a progress." This is in part an exact truth, for while we have a frame building on Robinson Hill neatly furnished, the house is not painted on the interior, and the grounds are unfenced; this is the only colored school building in really good condition.

Exactly the same state of affairs (children crowded onto backless benches) exists in Miss Beaulah Gibbs room on Robertson Hill. In these rooms the children are rather packed or penned than seated, to the great detriment of heath as well as manners. A. P. Woolridge”

(Ref: Austin Daily Statesman, June 2, 1887).


Robertson Hill School included high school grades their school in 1889 which were 9th grade and 10th grade. By then elementary school classes were held on the first floor and high school classes were held on the second floor. In 1896, the school had an enrollment of 84 students. (Ref: Brewer 1940:33).

At one point during the 19th century, Robertson Hill High School was the only high school for black people in Austin. Robertson Hill School served as an elementary school and high school for black students in Austin. Enrollment for this high school was very low as the student population was never or never went past 600 students. It was usually around 100 students to 200 students.


The initial location of Robertson Hill High School was in an area with at least 4 surrounding Black communities. White residents continually complained about the effects of the school (high school) on their quality of life beginning in the early 20th century.

In 1902, White Austinites implored the school board to build the black high school in Gregorytown. Their argument rested on the notion that the school should be in the center of the black community and not in an area populated by whites as well as blacks. (Ref: Austin Statesman: Gregorytown Gets the New Colored High School, 1902)

Despite efforts to relocate the school, further complaints culminated into a meeting between a committee of concerned white citizens and the school board on September 14, 1905. These citizens requested that the board find a more suitable location for the high school, arguing that on many occasions the police station had to be called on for protection”. Many white families lived in the neighborhood of the high school and argued that the school board should find a different location for it within a black neighborhood. (Ref: Austin Statesman, Removal of Robertson Hill School a Problem, 1905)

At one point during the early 20th century, Robertson Hill High School and L.C. Anderson High School were the only high schools for black people in Austin at the time. By 1904 the number had risen to 177 students. (Ref: Brewer 1940:33). Enrollment for Robertson Hill School was 105 students in 1905.

Robertson Hill High School was renamed to L.C. Anderson High School in 1907 to honor educator L.C. Anderson. This caused Robertson Hill School to remove Robertson Hill High School students from its building into a newly built building located at Olive Street and Curve Street in the Robertson Hill neighborhood of East Austin.

Robertson Hill School burned in 1938. Robertson Hill School was an elementary school when it burned. The school burned down due to red-hot coal in the old potbelly stoves. Heating for Robertson Hill School was still provided by old potbelly stoves and not central A/C  heating as the white schools were. Janitors would come fill the old potbelly stoves with coal and they would get red-hot. This proved to be a fire hazard as the school burned on several occasions.


Robertson Hill School was located the junction of 11th Street & San Marcos Street, Austin, Texas, US 78702.

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