Upon his return to return to Kenya and in consultation with his father,
Koinange Wa Mbiyu, Mbiyū Koinange decided to create an African-run, community owned college, modelled on his alma mater
Hampton Institute and on
Tuskegee University. Mbiyū Koinange was the principal of this Kenya Teachers College situated at Githunguri, the site of the first independent elementary school founded by Musa Ndirangū. The KTC's objective was to train teachers for the Kikuyu Independent Schools Association (KISA) and the Kikuyu Karinga Education Authority (KKEA), founded in 1929, and to increase their independence from missionary training centres. In 1952, just as a state of emergency was decreed in Kenya and the Kapenguria Six and many others, notably associated with the KTC, were arrested, Mbiyū Koinange was in England representing the Kenya African Union, thus narrowly escaping arrest himself. Following the proscription of the KISA and KKEA schools in late 1952, Mbiyu Koinange remained in England, returning ten years later as the secretary of the Pan-African Freedom Movement for East, Central and South Africa. ==Political career==