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https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2019/06/12/fr-augustus-tolton-former-african-american-slave-advances-toward-sainthood/The article says nothing about his virtues, that are required, for his canonization, but it sure does point out that no American seminary would take him in because he was black. I find this possible, but highly doubtful. He may very well be a saint in Heaven, but this seems to be just another Novus Ordo political move.
Here is some info on James Augustine Healy, an eventual bishop in Maine, who was of mixed-race ancestry. He could not attend any southern seminary, but was sent to the Sulpicians first in Montreal, and later in Paris. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Augustine_Healy
It could have just as easily because he didn't have enough education for the seminary, or the seminary in Rome he went to had African seminarians, so they figured it would be more cohesive. Where I live at least, the catholic schools and churches were segregated until the 1950s. So a seminary being segregated would make sense too, the problem is that there was no black seminary at the time, as he was the first AA priest.