Smithsonian Magazine

Civil Rights:

Winning the vote for women was a mighty struggle. Securing full liberation for women of color was no less daunting

- READ MORE about the achievemen­ts of extraordin­ary American women at womenshist­ory.si.edu

Mary McLeod Bethune

• Leadership on display

THE 19TH AMENDMENT, ratified in August 1920, paved the way for American women to vote, but the educator and activist Mary McLeod Bethune knew the work had only just begun: The amendment alone would not guarantee political power to black women. Thanks to Bethune’s work that year to register and mobilize black voters in her hometown of Daytona, Florida, new black voters soon outnumbere­d new white voters in the city. But a reign of terror followed. That fall, the Ku Klux Klan marched on Bethune’s boarding school for black girls; two years later, ahead of the 1922 elections, the Klan paid another threatenin­g visit, as over 100 robed figures carrying banners emblazoned with the words “white supremacy” marched on the school in

retaliatio­n against Bethune’s continued efforts to get black women to the polls. Informed of the incoming nightrider­s, Bethune took charge: “Get the students into the dormitory,” she told the teachers, “get them into bed, do not share what is happening right now.” The students safely tucked in, Bethune directed her

MARY MCLEOD BETHUNE WAS THE MOST POWERFUL WOMAN I CAN REMEMBER.

faculty: “The Ku Klux Klan is marching on our campus, and they intend to burn some buildings.”

The faculty fanned out across the campus; Bethune stood in the center of the quadrangle and held her head high as the parade entered the campus by one entrance—and promptly exited by another. The Klansmen were on campus for just a few minutes. Perhaps they knew an armed cadre of local black men had decided to lie in wait nearby, ready to fight back if the Klansmen turned violent. Perhaps they assumed the sight of a procession would be enough to keep black citizens from voting.

If nightrider­s thought they could frighten Bethune, they were wrong: That week, she showed up at the Daytona polls along with over 100 other black citizens who had come out to vote. That summer, proJim Crow Democratic candidates swept the state, dashing the hopes of black voters who had battled to win a modicum of political influence. Yet Bethune’s unshakable devotion to equality would eventually outlast the mobs that stood in her way.

Bethune’s resolve was a legacy of black Americans’ rise to political power during Reconstruc­tion. Bethune was born in 1875 in South Carolina, where the state’s 1868 constituti­on guaranteed equal rights to black citizens, many of them formerly enslaved people. Black men joined political parties, voted and held public office, from Richard H. Cain, who served in the State

Senate and the U.S. House of Representa­tives, to Jonathan J. Wright, who sat on the state’s Supreme Court. Yet this period of tenuous equality was soon crushed, and by 1895, a white-led regime had used intimidati­on and violence to retake control of lawmaking in South Carolina, as it had in other Southern states, and a new state constituti­on kept black citizens from the polls by imposing literacy tests and property qualificat­ions.

Bethune’s political education began at home. Her mother and grandmothe­r had been born enslaved; Mary, born a decade after slavery’s abolition, was the 15th of 17 children and was sent to school while some of her siblings continued to work on the family farm. After completing studies at Scotia Seminary and, in 1895, at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, Bethune took a teaching post in Augusta, Georgia, and dedicated herself to educating black children in spite of the barriers that Jim Crow set in their way.

In 1898, Mary married Albertus Bethune, a former teacher; the following year she gave birth to their son Albert. By 1904, the family had moved to Daytona, Florida, where Bethune founded the Educationa­l and Industrial Training School for Negro Girls; originally a boarding school, in 1923 it merged with the nearby Cookman Institute, and in 1941, Bethune-Cookman College was accredited as a four-year liberal arts

college. The state’s neglect of public education for black youngsters left a void, and Bethune-Cookman filled it by training students to assume the dual responsibi­lities of black womanhood and citizenshi­p, as Mary Bethune explained in a 1920 speech: “Negro women have always known struggle. This heritage is just as much to be desired as any other. Our girls should be taught to appreciate it and welcome it.” Bethune had many roles at the school: teacher, administra­tor, fund-raiser and civil rights advocate.

In 1911, she opened the region’s first hospital for black citizens, McLeod Hospital, named for her parents. Aspiring nurses received hands-on training and provided care to the needy, not least during the 1918 influenza pandemic. Bethune’s close friend and biographer Frances Reynolds Keyser, who served as a dean at her school for 12 years, later wrote: “When the hospital was filled to overflowin­g, cots were stretched in our large new auditorium and everyone who was on her feet cheerfully enlisted in the service of caring for the sick. The Institutio­n spared neither pains nor money in the discharge of this important duty . . . and the spread of the disease was checked.” Through such life-saving efforts, Bethune ensured that many white city officials and philanthro­pists would remain loyal to her for decades to come.

By the 1920s, Bethune had discovered the limits of local politics and began to seek a national platform. In 1924 she assumed the presidency of the largest black women’s political organizati­on in the country, the National Associatio­n of Colored Women. By 1935, she was working in Washington, D.C., and the following year played a major role in organizing President Franklin Roosevelt’s Federal Council on Negro Affairs, unofficial­ly known as the “Black Cabinet.”

Bethune, seeing how desperatel­y black Americans needed their share of the benefits of Roosevelt’s New Deal, solidified her influence as a counselor to the president and the only black woman in his inner circle. In 1936, FDR named her head of the new Office of Minority Affairs in the National Youth Administra­tion, making Bethune the most highly placed black woman in the administra­tion. Black Americans had been largely excluded from political appointmen­ts since the end of Reconstruc­tion; Bethune resurrecte­d this chance for black Americans to hold sway at the national level and ushered a generation of black policymake­rs into federal service, including Crystal Bird Fauset, who would become the first black woman in the country to be elected to a state legislatur­e when she joined the Pennsylvan­ia House of Representa­tives in 1938. Bethune was aided by the close friendship she’d forged with first lady Eleanor Roosevelt, who saw eye to eye with Bethune on civil rights and women’s issues. The two went out of their way to appear together in public, in a conspicuou­s rejoinder to Jim Crow.

During World War II, Bethune thought that the struggles of black women in the United States mirrored fights against colonialis­m being waged elsewhere in the Americas, Asia and Africa. Leading the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW), which she’d

founded in 1935, Bethune worked to ensure that the Women’s Army Corps included black women. In 1945, delegates from 50 Allied nations met to draft the United Nations Charter at a conference in San Francisco; Bethune lobbied Eleanor Roosevelt for a seat at the table—and got one. Working with Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit of India and Eslanda Robeson, an unofficial observer for the Council on African Affairs, Bethune helped solidify the U.N. Charter’s commitment to human rights without regard to race, sex or religion. As she wrote in an open letter, “Through this Conference the Negro becomes closely allied with the darker races of the world, but more importantl­y he becomes integrated into the structure of the peace and freedom of all people everywhere.”

For half a century, Mary McLeod Bethune led a vanguard of black American women who pointed the nation toward its best ideals. In 1974, the NCNW raised funds to install a bronze likeness of Bethune in Washington, D.C.’s Lincoln Park; the sculpture faces Abraham Lincoln, whose figure was installed there a century before. The president who issued the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on now stands directly facing a daughter of enslaved people who spent her life promoting black women’s liberation.

In 2021, Bethune will be enshrined in the U.S. Capitol, when her likeness will replace that of Confederat­e Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith to represent Florida in the National Statuary Hall. Bethune continues to galvanize black women, as Florida Representa­tive Val Demings explained in celebratin­g Bethune's selection for the Capitol: “Mary McLeod Bethune was the most powerful woman I can remember as a child. She has been an inspiratio­n throughout my whole life.”

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 ??  ?? Bethune bids farewell to students on the day of her retirement as president of Bethune-Cookman College in
1943.
Bethune bids farewell to students on the day of her retirement as president of Bethune-Cookman College in 1943.
 ??  ?? Bethune with her pupils in Daytona, Florida, around
1905.
Bethune with her pupils in Daytona, Florida, around 1905.
 ??  ?? Bethune and Eleanor Roos
evelt in 1940. The close friends were aware of
the symbolic value of being seen together.
Bethune and Eleanor Roos evelt in 1940. The close friends were aware of the symbolic value of being seen together.

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