He returned to his home and enrolled in
Liber College in
Liber,
Jay County, Indiana, the only black student in the county. In 1866 he passed a qualifying examination to become a teacher in
Sidney, Ohio and taught for three months. That fall he returned to Liber College. At the end of his term, he had run out of money and he returned to his farm, and he did not finish his studies at Liber. The next fall he went to Washington County, Ohio and passed another teaching examination in
Marietta, Ohio. He then taught at a school in
Wesley Township, Ohio. Around this time he became acquainted with
Erastus Milo Cravath of the Freedman's Aid Association and the
American Missionary Association in
Cincinnati, Ohio. On April 14, 1867, he took a teaching job in
Cynthiana, Kentucky teaching under the auspices of the American Missionary Association and the Western Freedman's Aid Commission. At Cynthiana, he faced much animosity as a northern teacher, but he remained for two years. At the end of that time he returned to school, now at
Berea College, where he also worked as a janitor, chopped wood, and student-taught, allowing him to finish his course. January 12, 1874 he began to teach in Russellville at the colored Baptist church, where he remained. == Civil activities ==