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Mary Mcleod Bethune's Influence On Education

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Mary Mcleod Bethune's Influence On Education
The biographical masterpiece that is originally known as “Mary McLeod Bethune in Florida: Bringing justice to the Sunshine State”, tells the story of Dr. Bethune and her rise to power and humanitarianism from just a little girl born in Mayesville, SC. With a heart of gold and a burning passion for education, she enrolled in Scotia Seminary in Concord, North Carolina. After being rejected from her dream school because of a ban on African Americans traveling to Africa, Dr. Bethune was offered a position as a teacher at Haines Normal and Industrial School, the first school for African Americans in Augusta, Georgia. From this point Dr. Bethune’s path is carefully and documented as she eventually did bring social justice to the sunshine state. Dr. Bethune’s career as a teacher took off she was taken under the wing of Lucy Craft Laney who inspired her to open up a school of her own. With that motivation, $1.50, five little girls, and faith in god Dr. Bethune made her dream a reality and opened up the Daytona Literary and Industrial school for Training Negro Girls.
With this dream finally becoming a reality, the future only seemed bright for Doctor Bethune as a leader, a parent, an educator, and the woman who would bring the city of Daytona beach together. With generous
…show more content…
Bethune’s success it seems that the city of Daytona didn’t believe that African Americans were equivalent to them based on this hideous Jim Crow law. Daytona Beach has the most beautiful beaches and they were relatively open to everybody even African Americans. “Two of the twenty-six founding fathers of the town were African Americans: John Tolliver and Thaddeus S. Gooden” (page 69). So if founding fathers were African Americans then it seems completely stupid to deny African Americans rights but this is exactly what took place in the 1920s. “By the 1920s, African Americans had been banned from the beaches, although they made up nearly half of the city’s population by 1910” (Robertson

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