The remaining 23.1-acre (9.3 ha) campus contains seven buildings constructed between 1906 and 1964 as well as a circa 1943 water tower.
[3] The school was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on July 28, 1999.
Brown, a graduate of Snow Hill Normal and Industrial Institute[4] and Harvard University, was a proponent of the ideas of Booker T. Washington.
He was dedicated to improving the quality of life for African Americans in Dallas County during the Jim Crow era of racial segregation.
This article about a property in Alabama on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.