American Decades
Chronicles of Faith: The Autobiography of Frederick D. Patterson
Autobiography
By: Frederick Douglass Patterson
Date: 1991
Source: Patterson, Frederick Douglass. Chronicles of Faith: The Autobiography of Frederick D. Patterson. Martia Graham Goodson, ed. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1991, 121–23.
About the Author: Frederick Douglass Patterson (1901–1988), born in Washington, D.C., was named after Frederick Douglass, the famous nineteenth-century abolitionist. Orphaned at the age of two, he was raised by an aunt in Texas. Patterson went on to earn a master of science, a doctor of veterinary medicine degree, and a doctorate in philosophy. He became the president of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama in 1935 and founded the United Negro College Fund in 1944.
Introduction
For most of this country's history, African Americans who wanted a higher education faced the barriers of outright discrimination and Jim Crow...
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1940's Education Primary Sources
- "Whither the American Indian?"
- Mary McLeod Bethune's Letter to Eleanor Roosevelt
- "Schools for New Citizens"
- "History DE-American History and Contemporary Civilization"
- "The Eight-Year Study"
- "Rupert, Idaho—Children Go to Swimming Classes in the School Bus"
- "America Was Schoolmasters"
- Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944
- Constitution of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO)
- Science, the Endless Frontier
- Higher Education for American Democracy: Vol. I, Establishing the Goals
- A Community School in a Spanish-Speaking Village
- Education in a Japanese American Internment Camp
- Chronicles of Faith: The Autobiography of Frederick D. Patterson
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
