BLACK IN TIME: A Moment In OUR History
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Mary McLeod Bethune, One Of America's Greatest Educators And Activists, Died On May 18, 1955.
The Daughter Of Former Slaves (Samuel And Patsy McLeod), Mary Bethune
Was Born July 10, 1875, In Mayesville, South Carolina. She Was One Of
17 Children.
Growing Up She Worked In The Cotton Fields Of South Carolina. She
Eventually Made Her Way Through College (Scotia Seminary, Near Concord,
NC), Got Married (To Albertus Bethune) And Had A Son.
Mary McLeod Bethune Would Go On To Become One Of The Most Influential And Important African Americans In History.
In 1904, With Only a $1.50 To Invest, She Built Daytona Normal And Industrial School For Negro Girls. The Original Four-Room Schoolhouse Was Built On A Garbage Dump. After Merging With The Cookman Institute For Men In 1923, Bethune-Cookman College
Became One Of The Finest Institutions Of Higher Learning In The
Country. Bethune Served As The School's President From 1904-1942.
Bethune Was Known As "America's First Black Lady," And
Served Regularly As An Advisor To Presidents. She Worked With Herbert
Hoover On Child Health Issues And With Franklin D. Roosevelt On Youth
And Minority Affairs. She Was Harry S. Truman's Personal Representative
At The Inauguration Ceremony Of The President Of Liberia.
In 1935, Bethune Founded, And Was The First President Of, The National Council Of Negro Women.
She Died Of A Heart Attack In 1955. In 1974, The $400,000 Mary McLeod
Bethune Memorial Was Unveiled In Washington DC's Lincoln Park. The
Inscription Was Taken From Her Own Words:
"I leave you love, I leave you hope, I leave you the challenge
of developing confidence in one another. I leave you a thirst for
education. I leave you respect for the uses of power. I leave you
faith. I leave you racial dignity."
"In Order For Black History To Live, We Must Continue To Breathe Life Into It." -- Hubert Gaddy, Jr.






