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Timeline of jazz education
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Timeline of jazz education : ウィキペディア英語版
Timeline of jazz education

== Non-academic ==

* ca. 1890: Jenkins Orphanage Bands. The Rev. Daniel Joseph Jenkins established an orphanage in Charleston, South Carolina.
* 1890s: Alpha Cottage School An orphanage in Kingston, Jamaica offering a music programme.
* No date: Colored Waifs Home for Boys (see Louis Armstrong).
* No date: Jane Addams's Hull House, Chicago (see Benny Goodman).
* 1916: Major N. Clark Smith taught at Lincoln High School, Kansas City. From 1922 he taught at Wendell Phillips High School in Chicago.
* 1917: Industrial High School in Birmingham, Alabama. Fess (John T.) Watley offered extracurricular marching and concert bands, and the Jazz Demons in 1922.
* 1924: Under the direction of Volney Cyrus Barcus (1903–1990), then a student,〔Obituary: ''V. Cyrus Barcus'', Park Cities People, pg 9, February 22, 1990〕 the Southern Methodist University Band introduced dixieland jazz to the football field on September 27, 1924, during a game against the University of North Texas in Denton.〔(SMU, Mustang Band History )〕〔''SMU Band Living up to Standard'', Dallas Morning News, November 6, 1975, Sect. B, pg 17〕
* 1927: Jimmie Lunceford organised a jazz band at Manassa High School, Memphis, known as the Chickasaw Syncopators.
* 1930s: The Bama State Collegians, a student jazz orchestra was founded in the 1930s at Alabama State University and was organized by Len Bowden and Fess Whatley. They were directed by Tommy Stewart and Erskine Hawkins.
* 1931: Capt. Walter Dyett produced many well-known jazz musicians at Wendell Phillips High School and from 1935 at DuSable High School.
* ca. 1935: Samuel R. Browne taught music at Jefferson High School in Los Angeles.
* ca. 1940: Prairie View Co-eds flourished as a poplular all-female band.
* 1957: Lenox School of Jazz: Summer jazz school in Massachusetts founded.
* 1959: Stan Kenton, in conjunction with National Stage Band Clinics founder Ken Morris start the first long running summer jazz camp, later to be renamed The Stan Kenton Summer Clinics. This camp featured the whole Stan Kenton Orchestra, plus other well known jazz educators on the faculty. It continued until Stan's passing in 1979.
* 1964: Jazzmobile, Inc., is founded in 1964 by Daphne Arnstein, an arts patron and founder of the Harlem Cultural Council and Dr. William "Billy" Taylor.
* 1967: Stan Kenton participation at Tanglewood Education Symposium for the first time addresses validity and perpetuation of American jazz education programs in school band programs.
* 1968: Music Educators National Conference (MENC) establish the National Association of Jazz Educators (NAJE) at annual conference in Seattle. Based in Manhattan, Kansas, the organization was renamed the International Association for Jazz Education (IAJE) in 1989. It went bankrupt in 2008.
* 2000s: World Heart Beat Music Academy is a music academy in the UK with a strong jazz course

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