American Decades
Mary McLeod Bethune's Letter to Eleanor Roosevelt
Letter
By: Mary McLeod Bethune
Date: April 22, 1941
Source: McCluskey, Audrey Thomas, and Elaine M. Smith, eds. Mary McLeod Bethune: Building a Better World—Essays and Selected Documents. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999, 120–21.
About the Author: Mary McLeod Bethune (1895–1955) one of seventeen children whose parents were freed slaves, was born in Mayesville, South Carolina. She opened a school for girls in 1904, which later became Bethune-Cookman College, where she served as president for many years. She was the director of the Division of Negro Affairs of the National Youth Administration (NYA) and the founder and first president of the National Council of Negro Women. In 1974, she was honored with a national monument in Washington, D.C.
Introduction
The story of Mary McLeod Bethune's struggle to get an education and fund her own...
[The entire page is 1915 words long]
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
