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Built in 1928, the C.C. Hubbard High School (also known as Lincoln School and Lincoln-Hubbard School) educated black students in Sedalia, Missouri. Named for its first principal Christopher C. Hubbard in 1943, the school is the last remaining building in Sedalia that was built and used specifically as a segregated school for black students. Used as a regional school for black students, the Lincoln-Hubbard school bused black students from Otterville, Syracuse, Georgetown, Longwood, Tipton, and Warrensburg suggesting that those communities did not have adequate high schools for their local black students. Later closing in 1962, the Hubbard School housed the Lincoln-Hubbard Neighborhood Assistance Program which served special needs students until 1973. Today, the building was renovated as an apartment building for senior citizens.


C.C. Hubbard High School

Cloud, Sky, Building, Window

Chalfant, Rhonda. "C.C. Hubbard School on the National Register of Historic Places." Sedalia Democrat (Sedalia, MO) June 20th, 2022. https://archive.is/SshXI#selection-1185.0-1185.63

Christopher Columbus Hubbard Memorial, Find A Grave. Accessed July 7th, 2023. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/97963620/christopher-columbus-hubbard.

Lincoln Hubbard, Wallace Architects, LLC. Accessed July 7th, 2023. https://wallacearchitects.com/portfolio/lincoln-hubbard-sedalia-missouri/.

Melton, Larry. Dorothy Kitchen was Sedalia’s ‘Treemonisha’, The Synopated Times. November 22nd, 2019. Accessed July 7th, 2023. https://syncopatedtimes.com/dorothy-kitchen-was-sedalias-treemonisha/.

National Register of Historic Places Registration Form: C.C. Hubbard High School, United States Department of the Interior National Park Service. May 29th, 1997. Accessed July 7th, 2023. https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/opastorage/live/39/8199/63819939/content/electronic-records/rg-079/NPS_MO/97000628.pdf.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

https://wallacearchitects.com/portfolio/lincoln-hubbard-sedalia-missouri/