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  1. 27 de ene. de 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 ...

  2. 25 de ene. de 2024 · Mary McLeod Bethune meurt en mai 1955 d’une crise cardiaque. La presse de tout le pays rend hommage à son parcours, à ses accomplissements et à sa personnalité. Liens utiles. Page wikipedia de Mary McLeod Bethune Page wikipedia de Mary McLeod Bethune en anglais Mary McLeod Bethune (1875-1955), historienne africaine-américaine oubliée

  3. 29 de sept. de 2022 · Sep 29, 2022. American educator and activist Mary McLeod Bethune at the U.S. Capitol, circa 1950. (© Hutton Archive/Getty Images) Mary McLeod Bethune was an educator, an activist for civil rights and women’s rights, a college president and an adviser to U.S. presidents. Recently, a statue of Bethune was unveiled in the rotunda of the U.S ...

  4. May 18, 1955. Mary McLeod Bethune became one of the most celebrated African American figures of the New Deal era and extended her influence as an educator, civil rights activist, and advocate for women’s equality for more than three decades from the 1920s to the 1950s. Born near Mayesville, South Carolina, July 10, 1875, she was the 15th of ...

  5. Mary Jane McLeod Bethune, nascida Mary Jane McLeod ( Mayesville, 10 de julho de 1875 – Daytona Beach, 18 de maio de 1955) foi uma educadora, filantropa e ativista dos direitos civis norte-americana, especialmente conhecida por abrir uma escola particular para afro-americanos em Daytona Beach, Flórida . Ficou conhecida como "A Primeira-Dama ...

  6. 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.

  7. Bethune insisted it was incumbent upon modern women to ensure that the franchise “promot[ed] security at home, and mutual respect and peace among the peoples of the world.” [4] Mary McLeod Bethune did not wield a picket sign or participate in the 1913 suffrage parade. She was crafting and modeling behavior for future women voters.