Laney worked as a teacher in Macon,
Milledgeville, and
Savannah, Georgia for ten years before deciding to open a school of her own. Due to health reasons, she settled in
Augusta, Georgia, where she founded the city's first school for black children. Her first class in 1883 had six students, but Laney quickly attracted interest in the African-American community. By the end of the second year, the school had 234 students. With the increase in students, she needed more funding for her operation. She attended the northern
Presbyterian Church Convention in 1886 in
Minneapolis, Minnesota and pleaded her case there, but was initially turned down. One of the attendees, Francine E. H. Haines, later declared an interest in and donated $10,000 to Laney for the school. With this money, Laney expanded her offerings. She changed the school's name to The Haines Normal and Industrial Institute in honor of her benefactor and to indicate its goals of industrial and teacher training. The school eventually grew to encompass an entire city block of buildings. By 1928, at a time when public education was still segregated, the school's enrollment was more than 800 students. ==Haines Normal and Industrial Institute==