The school was founded in 1870 by
William Syphax, President of the Board of Trustees for Colored Schools, as the
Preparatory High School for Colored Youth. The school was started at the Fifteenth Street Presbyterian Church. From 1891 to 1916, it became known as
M Street High School. The school was America's first public high school for Black students. When its location was changed from M Street, the school was renamed in 1916 for the noted African-American poet,
Paul Laurence Dunbar, who died in 1906. As the city established other high schools, it designated Dunbar as its academic high school, with other schools providing more vocational or technical training. Dunbar was known for its excellent academics, enough so that some Black parents moved to Washington specifically so their children could attend it. All the public school teachers were federal employees, and Dunbar's faculty was paid well by the standards of the time, earning parity pay with Washington's white school teachers. The school boasted many graduates who went on to higher education and a generally successful student body. Dunbar's original 1916 building, designed by architect
Snowden Ashford, was demolished in 1977 and subsequently rebuilt; the resulting building was in turn demolished and rebuilt in 2013. In the 21st century, Dunbar is similar to
Paul Laurence Dunbar High School in
Baltimore, Maryland and
Fort Worth, Texas, as all three schools have a majority
African-American student body and are of major importance to the local
African-American community. All three schools are also highly regarded for their athletic programs within their respective school district in football, basketball, and track. There is also a Paul Laurence Dunbar High School in
Lexington, Kentucky. One of Dunbar's first principals in Washington, D.C., was the first Black graduate of
Harvard College. Almost all the teachers had graduate degrees, and several earned PhDs. By the 1950s, Dunbar High School sent 80 percent of its students to college. According to economist
Thomas Sowell's 2015 appraisal, this all changed after the landmark United States Supreme Court Case
Brown v. Board of Education that ruled for integration of public schools: "For Washington, the end of racial segregation led to a political compromise, in which all schools became neighborhood schools. Dunbar, which had been accepting outstanding Black students from anywhere in the city, could now accept only students from the rough ghetto neighborhood in which it was located. Virtually overnight, Dunbar became a typical ghetto school. As unmotivated, unruly and disruptive students flooded in, Dunbar teachers began moving out and many retired. More than 80 years of academic excellence simply vanished into thin air." Since its inception, the school has graduated many well-known figures of the 20th century, including
Sterling Brown,
H. Naylor Fitzhugh,
Nannie Helen Burroughs,
Charles R. Drew,
William H. Hastie,
Charles Hamilton Houston,
Robert Heberton Terrell,
Benjamin O. Davis Sr.,
Jean Toomer, Paul Capel, III,
Robert C. Weaver, and
James E. Bowman. Its illustrious faculty included
Anna Julia Cooper,
Kelly Miller,
Mary Church Terrell,
A. A. Birch Jr.,
Carter G. Woodson, and
Julia Evangeline Brooks, who was also a graduate of the school. Cooper was also an early principal, as were
Richard Greener,
Mary Jane Patterson, and
Robert Heberton Terrell. An unusual number of teachers and principals held Ph.D. degrees, including historian
Carter G. Woodson, the second African American to earn a PhD from Harvard (after
W. E. B. Du Bois) and the father of 'Black History Month'. Until 1954, Fairfax County, Virginia, had no secondary schools for Black students. Dunbar and several other District of Columbia public schools accepted Black students from the county before that time. == Admissions ==