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  1. 26 de feb. de 2018 · Mary McLeod Bethune (1875-1955) – Educator, Public Administrator, Civil Rights Activist Editor’s Note: This entry includes content from two contributors: the National Park Service and Jerry Marx, Ph.D., Associate Professor and Chair, University of New Hampshire School of Social Work.

  2. 2. Su acceso a la educación. Mary M. Bethune, nació el día 10 de julio de 1875 como Mary Jane McLeod en una plantación de algodón y arroz, cerca de la ciudad de Mayesville en el estado de Carolina del Sur. Patsy McIntosh, su madre, era esclava en la hacienda McIntosh, en Mayesville. Su padre, Samuel McLeod, también nació esclavo en la ...

  3. 5 McCluskey Audrey Thomas et Smith Elaine, Mary McLeod Bethune. Building a Better World, Essays and ; 3 Pourtant, le leadership et le militantisme de Mary McLeod Bethune sont loin d’avoir attiré une attention comparable à celle portée à ses homologues masculins par la communauté universitaire5.

  4. 3 de jun. de 2019 · Mary McLeod Bethune (nata Mary Jane McLeod; 10 luglio 1875 – 18 maggio 1955) è stata una pioniera educatrice afroamericana e leader per i diritti civili. Bethune, che credeva fermamente che l'istruzione fosse la chiave per la parità di diritti, nel 1904 fondò il rivoluzionario Daytona Normal and Industrial Institute (ora noto come Bethune-Cookman College).

  5. Mary McLeod Bethune Papers, Mary McLeod Bethune Foundation, Bethune-Cookman College, Daytona Beach, FL. "Ever since my student days at Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, in the 'Nineties,' when I so much wanted to find happiness as a missionary to Africa, I had seen myself doing just this - counseling and praying with the native people in the far-away land of my ancestors and here I was.

  6. 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.

  7. 23 de ago. de 2017 · Mary McLeod Bethune (1875-1955). Mary McLeod Bethune’s dream of establishing a school of her own finally became real when she opened the doors of Daytona Educational and Industrial Training School for Girls in 1904 with five students.