In Part II, Mrs Bethune visits England to further broaden her educational horizon. She receives the Joel E. Spingan Award, presented by the NAACP. She meets with President Franklin D. Roosevelt and accepts a position in his administration
The program includes interviews with Mrs. Oswald Bronson, a student at Bethune-Cookman College when Mrs Bethune was president of the school, Dr Robert Weaver, who served in the "unofficial Black Cabinet" with Mrs. Bethune, and later served as the first Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in the Lyndon B. Johnson administration, in addition to being the flrst black member of a presidents cabinet, and Marya McWhirter, a researcher at the Bethune Museum and Archives in Washington, D. C The program closes with a reading of Mrs Bethune's legacy to her people and the nation.
BACKGROUND: Mary Mcleod Bethune was born in Mayesville, South Carolina in 1875. She attended a local mission school, then received scholarships for further studies out-of-state. The illiteracy rate in South Carolina at that time was very high. Mrs. Bethune believed that learning to read was a key to economic opportunity and power, especially among blacks. In Daytona, Florida she started a school fbr Negro girls which grew over the years to become Bethune-Cookman College. Through her travels for fund-raising she became active in club work and eventually served as an advisor on minority affairs to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Standards
- 8.5.CX Analyze the correlation between the Modern Civil Rights Movement in South Carolina and the U.S.
- This indicator was designed to foster inquiry into the role of South Carolina in the Modern Civil Rights Movement, to include the influence of court cases such as Briggs v. Elliot and Flemming v. South Carolina Electric and Gas. This indicator was also developed to promote inquiry into the relationship between national leadership, protests, and events and South Carolina leadership, protests and events, such as the Friendship Nine and the Orangeburg Massacre.