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  1. Bethune insisted it was incumbent upon modern women to ensure that the franchise “promot[ed] security at home, and mutual respect and peace among the peoples of the world.” [4] Mary McLeod Bethune did not wield a picket sign or participate in the 1913 suffrage parade. She was crafting and modeling behavior for future women voters.

  2. Jan 19, 2007 · Mary Jane McLeod was born on July 10, 1875, the fifteenth of seventeen children of Samuel and Patsy McIntosh McLeod, former slaves in Maysville, South Carolina. As a child, she quickly discovered the value of education. Unlike her parents and all but two of her siblings, Bethune was born free and was formally educated at the Maysville School, a ...

  3. 2 days ago · Mary McLeod Bethune achieved her greatest recognition at the Washington, DC townhouse that is now this National Historic Site. The Council House was the first headquarters of the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) and was Bethune’s last home in Washington, DC. From here, Bethune and the NCNW spearheaded strategies and developed programs that advanced the interests of African American women.

  4. Mary McLeod Bethune was born in Mayesville, South Carolina, on July 10, 1875. She was the fifteenth of seventeen children born to parents, who, along with eight of her older siblings, had been enslaved. Despite their financial struggles, the family purchased five acres of land from their former master, and their fortunes improved.

  5. Mary McLeod Bethune, 10 Jul 1875 - 18 May 1955. Exhibition Label. Born Mayesville, South Carolina. The fifteenth of seventeen children born to formerly enslaved parents, Mary McLeod Bethune believed deeply in education as the main route out of poverty for herself and other African Americans. In 1904, she founded the Daytona Normal and ...

  6. Jun 2, 2023 · Mary McLeod Bethune and President Franklin D. Roosevelt with others in the Oval Office at the White House . NPS / NABWH. Decades before an African American woman would be nominated on a major political party's presidential ticket, Mary McLeod Bethune was working to give African Americans a place in the executive branch of the U.S. federal government.

  7. Portrait of Mary McLeod Bethune . Scurlock Studio Records Archives Center NMAH, Smithsonian Institution. Humble Beginnings. Born Mary Jane McLeod on July 10, 1875 in Mayesville, South Carolina, the fifteenth of seventeen children, she had the unusual opportunity to attend school and receive an education not common among African Americans following the Civil War.

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