Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Mary McLeod Bethune ( )
2
(Slavery had just ended)
1875 Mary McLeod Bethune was born in Mayesville, SC. (Slavery had just ended)
3
As a child, white kids told her she couldn’t read.
This made her even more determined to learn.
4
She went to school for African Americans in a church.
Her teacher was Emma Wilson. She learned all she could before she left school at age 15.
5
She was offered a chance to go to Scotia Seminary….
an upscale high school for girls.
6
She became a teacher at an African-American school, Haines Institute, in Augusta, GA
.
7
1904 Bethune started her OWN school for girls, in Daytona Beach, FL with only $ Community members helped raise money to get the school started.
8
1924 Bethune started “women’s clubs” to capture the power of African American women. They raised money to provide health care for African children.
9
The National Youth Administration helped African Americans get jobs.
Great Depression: (end of 1920s – early 1930s) President Franklin Roosevelt hired Bethune to work in NYA. The National Youth Administration helped African Americans get jobs.
10
Bethune’s school expanded and became a college.
1931 Bethune’s school expanded and became a college. 1941 The college was named Bethune-Cookman College after Mary McLeod Bethune
11
Bethune won many awards and was honored in other countries.
12
1974 Her photo is on a United States stamp.
Bethune was the 1st African-American woman to be honored with a statue in a park in Washington D.C. Her photo is on a United States stamp.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.