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Degrading Equality
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Degrading Equality

John Frederick Bell on Oberlin, Berea, and the counterrevolution in higher education

Originally published on February 27, 2023 (Episode 305)

Introduction

In 1835, Oberlin College in Ohio made the radical decision to admit Black students as a matter of explicit policy. While a few other institutions allowed occasional Black enrollment, Oberlin’s stand was unique in its clarity and purpose. For decades, Black and white students there—and later at Berea College in Kentucky—stood together first in the cause of abolition, and then in the fight for civil rights.

Yet following the collapse of Reconstruction, even these campuses that once stood as bastions of equality began to draw color lines. Black students remained in the classroom, but discrimination crept into every other aspect of college life: housing, extracurriculars, and the informal networks that shaped campus culture. As John Frederick Bell demonstrates in his new book Degrees of Equality: Abolitionist Colleges and the Politics of Race (LSU Press, 2023), the shift amounted to a moral counterrevolution. Colleges originally founded to create a community of principle instead compromised their ideals, mirroring the retreat from equality in the nation at large.


About the Guest

John Frederick Bell is Associate Professor of History at Assumption University in Worcester, Massachusetts He is a social and cultural historian of the United States specializing in race, education, and the Black freedom struggle. Degrees of Equality is his first book.


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How should we interpret Oberlin’s and Berea’s retreat from racial equality after Reconstruction? Was this a story of institutional failure, or of broader national collapse? Share your reflections in the comments—and forward this episode to a colleague or student interested in the history of higher education and race.

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