Mary McLeod Bethune #1506

$ 8.00

Caption from poster__

 

 

 

 Mary McLeod Bethune

  " The true worth of a race must be measured

by the character of its womanhood."

 

 

Born the 15th of 17 children of former slaves in Maysville, South Carolina, 
Mary Jane McLeod Bethune eventually became a prominent educator, 
presidential advisor and political activist. As a child, Bethune quickly dis-
covered education’s relationship to political and economic freedom through
reading and writing. She was once ordered by a white child to put down a
book after insisting that she could not read. Unlike her parents and siblings,
Bethune was born free and was fortunate to be formally educated at the 
Maysville School, a missionary school for African Americans. Shortly after 
graduating from the Maysville School, Bethune continued her education on
a scholarship at the Scotia Seminary for Girls in Concord, North Carolina. 
After graduating from Scotia, Bethune initially wanted to be a Christian 
missionary in Africa. After teaching and working among blacks she realized
that “Africans in America needed Christ and school just as much as 
Negroes in Africa…My life work lay not in Africa but in my own country.
” Bethune taught in Georgia, South Carolina, Florida and Illinois before
settling in Daytona, Florida. There she opened a high school, hospital, 
and the Daytona Normal and Industrial Institute for Negro Girls in 1904. 
The popularity of Daytona Normal led to its merging with the Cookman 
Institute for Men in Jacksonville in 1923, thus becoming the Bethune-
Cookman College.Bethune’s tireless work led to several federal appoint-
ments as director of the National Youth Administration's Division of
Negro Affairs (1936-1943), and serving on President Truman's Com-
mittee of Twelve for National Defense (1951). In the National Youth 
Administration position, Bethune also functioned as the leading advisor
in President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “black cabinet” on minority affairs
and interracial relations. As a political activist Bethune was instrumental 
in integrating the Red Cross and increasing public awareness of lynching.  
She also served as president of the Florida Federation of Colored Women
(1917) and the National Association of Colored Women (1924). In 1935, 
Bethune founded the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW), and 
in 1940 she served as the Vice-President of the NAACP. Mary McLeod 
Bethune died in 1955. Now available 11" x 17" Print with Black Frames
$20.00.
 
 

Now available 11" x 17"
Print with Black Frames $25.00

For 24" x 36' Size prints
please call 678-608-7892 to order

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