After graduating from Tabor College, Kealing moved to
Waco, Texas, where he took on the role as University President of Paul Quinn College from 1881 to 1883. Kealing moved back to Austin in 1884, to head the Robertson Hill School, the first school established for black children in Austin, in its inaugural year. In 1889, the Robertson Hill School added a high school department when black residents double-taxed themselves (at the time, public school funding was only allocated for white schools) and Kealing served as its first principal. In 1907, the Robertson Hill School was renamed
Anderson High School. At some point, between 1890 and 1895, Kealing stepped down as principal of the Robertson Hill School and began focusing more of his time advocating for
freedmen and working within the A.M.E Church. == A.M.E Church involvement and activism ==