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Mary McLeod Bethune

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Mary McLeod Bethune Education s Champion Mary McLeod Bethune Born near Mayesville, South Carolina While her parents and relatives had to deal with slavery by the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mary McLeod Bethune


1
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Educations Champion

2
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Born near Mayesville, South Carolina
  • While her parents and relatives had to deal with
    slavery by the time Mary had been born in 1875
    slavery had ended.
  • African Americans didnt go to school with white
    children.
  • As a child she was told that she couldnt read a
    book by a white child. She promised herself that
    some day she would learn to read.

3
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Soon after this experience a school was started
    for African Americans.
  • Mary remembered how she felt when she was told
    that she couldnt read.
  • She worked hard to prove that the girl was wrong.

4
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • The school didnt have a building. They had to
    meet in a church.
  • By the time she was 15 she had learned all she
    could at her school. She was one of the few
    people in her community who could read.
  • She helped her older brothers and sisters learn
    things too.

5
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Her teacher visited her family and felt that Mary
    should go to high school.
  • She was offered a spot at a school in Concord,
    North Carolina. The school was called Scotia
    Seminary.
  • Mary jumped at the chance to go to school again.

Scotia Seminary
6
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • The whole community was so excited for Mary that
    they stopped work to see her off.
  • She had to go on a train from Mayesville to
    Concord.
  • Mary had never been on a train before.

7
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Her school was a big brick building which Mary
    thought was fancy. She had never been in one
    before.
  • In fact her whole school was fancy with a bed all
    to herself and knives and forks.
  • Mary had grown up in a simple wood cabin and she
    wasnt used to all these things.

8
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Since she wasnt used to this type of life she
    often made mistakes. She didnt let those
    mistakes stop her from working hard.
  • She wanted to help others and she did by helping
    the teachers clean their clothes and also by
    baking cakes and breads.

9
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • She was on the debate team a team that competes
    by making arguments for or against an idea.
  • Since she listened and encouraged the other girls
    she was soon seen as a leader.
  • After she finished going to Scotia she went to
    Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, Illinois. She
    wanted to become a Missionary.
  • She wanted to go to Africa to be a Missionary but
    the churches didnt send African Americans.

10
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • She was sad that she couldnt go but realized
    that children could use her help here in the
    United States.
  • She decided to become a teacher. She taught at a
    school called the Haines Institute in Augusta,
    Georgia.
  • It was a school for African Americans and the
    founder of the school, Lucy Laney, helped Mary a
    lot.

Lucy Laney
11
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Mary wanted to start a school of her own.
  • She decided to start one in Daytona Beach,
    Florida.
  • She started one there because there were so many
    African Americans living there. There were not
    enough schools there to help them.

12
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Despite having only 1.50 Mary worked long and
    hard (diligence).
  • People in the community helped Mary by donating
    clothes, supplies, and their talents to help her
    school get started.
  • When it opened in 1904 there were only 5
    students. By 1906 it had 250 students. She helped
    all learners girls, boys, and even adults.

13
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • There wasnt enough space so Mary had to find
    more.
  • She had to work hard to earn money to buy more
    land.
  • She asked the community and rode down dusty roads
    to churches and clubs for help. Even if she
    didnt receive money she didnt give up.
  • Her school grew and grew and in 1931 became a
    college.

14
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Mary knew the importance of working together. She
    got people to come together to help African
    American women.
  • The clubs were made up of volunteers people who
    chose to help in their communities without
    getting paid.
  • In 1924 Mary became president of a group of
    African American women who came from all over the
    United States.

15
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Segregation was still active during this time and
    white women couldnt sit with African American
    women.
  • During the 1920s she was asked by President
    Coolidge and President Hoover to come to meetings
    of leaders who wanted to help children.
  • She understood their authority and agreed to
    come.

Coolidge
Hoover
16
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • At the end of the 1920s the depression hit. Many
    people were without money and jobs.
  • Franklin Roosevelt helped people during this time
    with creating programs to help people earn money
    (The New Deal).
  • One program was the National Youth Administration
    (NYA) which gave jobs to young adults and
    teenagers.

17
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Eleanor Roosevelt had met Mary and knew she
    wanted justice for all African American young
    people.
  • Eleanor told Franklin about Bethune and she was
    asked to work for the NYA. She was given the most
    responsibility of any African American at this
    time.
  • She moved to Washington, D.C. to help make sure
    the NYA was helping African Americans.

18
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Thanks to the NYA many young African Americans
    got jobs which helped their families.
  • In 1941 Bethune-Cookman College became a four
    year college. Students could study all kinds of
    things.
  • When the United States went to war in 1941 many
    people who had worked in the NYA had training
    which they used to help make equipment for the
    war.
  • Mary was proud of all the things that she had
    done to help so many people.

19
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Bethune won many awards. Many universities and
    organizations in the United States honored her
    hard work for freedom and justice.
  • She received the Medal of Honor and Merit from
    Haiti in 1949.
  • She also got to go to Africa in 1952. While in
    Liberia she was awarded the Star of Africa Award.

20
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • Bethune died in 1955.
  • Her college just celebrated its 100th anniversary
    in 2004.
  • Her group, the National Council of Negro Women,
    is still at work.
  • In 1974 Bethune was honored with a statue in D.C.
    in a public park the first women and the first
    African American to do so.

21
Mary McLeod Bethune
  • She worked hard for the youth of the United
    States.
  • A famous quote
  • All my life I have lived for youth, I have
    begged for them and fought for them and lived for
    them. . . My story is their story.

22
Character Traits
  • Diligence Mary showed this by working so hard
    for so many years to build a school.
  • Respect for and Acceptance of Authority Mary
    showed this by doing what the President wanted
    her to do.
  • Justice Mary wanted everyone to be treated
    fairly and have a chance to succeed.

23
VOCABULARY
  • Authority The right and power to lead.
  • Debate team A team that competes by making
    arguments for or against an idea.
  • Depression A time when many people lost jobs and
    companies go out of business.

24
VOCABULARY
  • Missionary a person who helps people while
    teaching them about religion.
  • Segregation a system of keeping people of
    different races separated.
  • Volunteer a person who helps a group without
    pay.
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