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  1. Apr 2, 2014 · Mary McLeod Bethune was an educator and activist, serving as president of the National Association of Colored Women and founding the National Council of Negro Women.

  2. To the Black press, Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune was often referred to as theFirst Lady of Negro America.” She was nationally recognized for her numerous efforts to enhance the circumstances of Black Americans.

  3. Mary McLeod Bethune was born in 1875, number 15 of 17 children of former slaves, during the genesis of Jim Crow and the anti-Black violence that would ultimately plague the South for the duration of her life. By the time of her birth, Patsy and Samuel McLeod owned a small farm near Mayesville, South Carolina.

  4. MARY McLEOD BETHUNE QUICK FACTS. Mary McLeod Bethune used the power of education, political activism, and civil service to achieve racial and gender equality throughout the United States and the world.The first person in her family born free and the first person in her family afforded a formal education, Bethune emerged from abject poverty and oppression of the Reconstruction South to achieve ...

  5. The 19th Amendment, ratified in August 1920, paved the way for American women to vote, but the educator and activist Mary McLeod Bethune knew the work had only just begun: The amendment alone...

  6. Jan 27, 2021 · One of 17 children born to formerly enslaved people, Mary McLeod Bethune spent the first few years of her life picking cotton as her family worked to buy the land on which they had been enslaved ...

  7. Resource. Life Story: Mary McLeod Bethune, (1875–1955) Fighting for Racial Equality through Education and Public Service. The story of a woman whose Progressive Era commitment to education and civil rights led to high-profile roles in New Deal America. Print Page. Portrait of Mary McLeod Bethune.

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