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<div id="pageheader"><h3>Mary McLeod Bethune (1875-1955)</h3></div>
                  <div class="blockquote"> 
                    <p><img src="../images/nara_bethune_painting_43-14.jpg" alt="[painting of Mary McLeod Bethune by Betsy G. Reyneau]  " width="272" height="348" align="right">Equal
                       parts educator, politician, and social visionary, Mary
                      McLeod 
                      Bethune was one of the most prominent African American
                      women  of the first half of the twentieth century--and
                      one of the 
                      most powerful. Known as the "First Lady of the Struggle," 
                      she devoted her career to improving the lives of African
                       Americans through education and political and economic
                      
                      empowerment, first through the school she founded, Bethune-Cookman
                       College, later as president of the <a href="national-council-negro-women.cfm">National
                        Council of Negro Women,</a> and then as a top black administrator
                         in the Roosevelt administration. </p>
                    <p>Born the fifteenth of seventeen children to parents who
                       were former slaves, Mary Jane McLeod grew up in rural
                      South 
                      Carolina and attended segregated mission schools. She initially
                       intended to become a missionary but turned to education
                      
                      when the Presbyterian mission board rejected her application
                       to go to Africa. After marrying Albertus Bethune in 1898,
                      
                      she moved to Florida where in 1904 she founded the Daytona
                       Educational and Industrial School for Negro Girls. In
                      1923, 
                      the school merged with the all-male Cookman Institute of
                       Jacksonville and eventually became Bethune-Cookman College,
                      
                      a four-year, coeducational institution. Bethune served
                      as  the college's president until 1942 and again from 1946-47.
                      
                      At the same time, Bethune also cemented her position as
                       a leader in African American education and the African
                      American 
                      women's club movement by serving as president of state,
                       regional, and national organizations, including the National
                      
                      Association of Colored Women. In 1935, she founded a more
                       politically oriented organization, the National Council
                      
                      of Negro Women, a coalition of black women's organizations
                       focused on ending segregation and discrimination and cultivating
                      
                      better international relationships. She served as its president
                       until 1949.</p>

                    <p>Between 1936 and 1944 Bethune was director of Negro Affairs
                       in the <a href="nya.cfm">National Youth Administration</a> 
                      (NYA) and chair of an informal Black Cabinet, a group
                       of federally appointed black officials who met regularly
                      
                      to plan strategy and set black priorities for social change.
                       Using her clout as a top-ranking African American administrator
                      
                      in the Roosevelt administration, Bethune lobbied for African
                       American concerns and was instrumental in seeing that
                      African 
                      Americans received help from the federal government. Often
                       her efforts were unsuccessful -- her attempt to ensure
                      equal 
                      pay for African American federal workers was only partially
                       successful, for example -- but she persisted and African
                      
                      American youths were allowed to participate in NYA programs
                       in numbers proportional to the number of African Americans
                      
                      in the national population.</p>

                    <p>Bethune did not confine her efforts on behalf of African
                       Americans to government-sponsored programs. She was outspoken
                      
                      in her support for civil rights and actively supported
                      efforts  to end lynching and the poll tax. In addition,
                      she picketed 
                      Washington businesses that refused to hire African Americans,
                       demonstrated on behalf of the Scottsboro Boys and southern
                      
                      tenant farmers, and was a regular speaker at numerous conferences
                       devoted to racial issues. She was also active in such
                      civil 
                      rights organizations as the <a href="naacp.cfm">NAACP</a> 
                      and the National Urban League. Passionately committed to
                       African American history, she served as president of the
                      
                      Association for the Study of Negro Life and History from
                       1936 to 1951. </p>

                    <p>During <a href="world-war-2.cfm">World War II</a>, Bethune 
                      served as special assistant to the secretary of war and 
                      assistant director of the Women's Army Corps. In that capacity 
                      she organized the first women's officer candidate schools 
                      and lobbied federal officials, including <a href="roosevelt-franklin.cfm">Franklin 
                      Roosevelt</a>, on behalf of African American women who wanted 
                      to join the military. </p>

                    <p>Bethune left the federal government after the NYA disbanded
                       in 1944. She continued as president of the National Council
                      
                      of Negro Women until 1949 and, in that capacity, attended
                       the founding conference of the <a href="un.cfm">United
                       Nations</a>. 
                      After her retirement she returned to Florida where she
                       continued  to speak and write about civil rights issues.
                       She died in 1955. 
                    </p>

                    <p>While Bethune was a well-established African American leader before she met Eleanor 
                      Roosevelt in 1927, her career benefited substantially from ER's 
                      enthusiastic support. ER valued Bethune's political acumen and 
                      dynamic personality and was instrumental in bringing her to 
                      Washington and into the NYA. She also saw to it that Bethune 
                      had regular access to Franklin Roosevelt. Besides being political 
                      allies, ER and Bethune were very close personal friends. They 
                      met on a regular basis, traveled together and attended many 
                      of the same meetings and conferences. ER considered Bethune 
                      "a dear friend" and the two women remained close until Bethune's 
                      death.<br>
                      &nbsp;</p>


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<h4>Sources</h4>
                    <p>Cook, Blanche Wiesen. <EM>Eleanor Roosevelt, Volume Two,
                         1933-1938</EM>. New York: Viking Press, 1999, 158-161. </p>
                    <P><em>The Concise Dictionary of American Biography</em>.
                      5<sup>th</sup> ed. New York: Charles Scribner's
                        Sons, 1997, 55-57.</P>
                    <P><EM>The Dictionary of American Biography</EM>. Supplement
                       4. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1974. 703-704.</P>
                    <P>McCluskey, Audrey Thomas and Elaine M. Smith, eds. <EM>Mary
                         McLeod Bethune: Building a Better World</EM>. Bloomington:
                         Indiana University Press, 2001, 3-16.</P>
                    <P>Black, Allida, ed. <em>What I Hope to Leave Behind: The
                         Essential Essays of Eleanor Roosevelt.</em> Brooklyn,
                         N.Y.:  Carlson Publishing, Inc., 1995, 171-178.</P>
                    <P>Sicherman, Barbara and Carol Hurd Green, eds. <EM>Notable
                         American Women: The Modern Period</EM>. Cambridge, Mass.:
                          Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1980, 76-80.</P>

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