COLLECTION INFORMATION FROM
THE STATE OF FLORIDA
BUREAU OF ARCHIVES & RECORDS MANAGEMENT
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RECORD GROUP: 900000 CALL
NUMBER: M95-2
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| CREATOR: |
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Williams, Daniel M. (Daniel Mortimer), 1890-1969.
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| TITLE/DATE: |
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Biographical records on Mary McLeod Bethune, ca. 1890-1960.
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| VOLUME: |
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1.25 cubic ft. |
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| MEDIUM: |
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photographs |
| ARRANGEMENT: |
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By record type. |
BIOGRAPHICAL/
HISTORICAL NOTE: Daniel Mortimer Williams was
born in 1890 in Childress, Texas. He worked on newspapers in Texas,
New York and Washington, D.C. and was chief editorial writer for the
World-Telegram in the early 1930s. He also covered the White House
and State Department for Trans-Radio Press during World War II.
Williams planned to write a biography of Mary McLeod Bethune and accumulated
photographs, publications and newspaper clippings for the book. He conducted
several interviews with Ms. Bethune in the summer of 1946 though the
biography was never completed. Williams died in 1969. SUMMARY/ SCOPE NOTE: This series consists of records
related to the life of Mary McLeod Bethune. Mary McLeod
Bethune was born Mary Jane McLeod on July 10, 1875 in Mayesville, South
Carolina. After being sponsored at a mission school in South Carolina
and receiving a scholarship to Moody Bible Institute, she moved to Daytona
Beach in 1904 to begin her own school. Her one room school became
the Daytona Normal and Industrial School for Negro Girls and taught
not only reading and writing but home economics skills as well.
Her school grew over the years until 1923 when it merged with Cookman
Institute, a school for boys. The merged schools became known
as Bethune-Cookman College and continued to be located in Daytona Beach
where it is in operation today.
Bethune was active in the fight against racism and served under several
Presidents as a member of the unofficial African American "brain trust."
In 1936 she was appointed by President Roosevelt as the director of the
National Youth Administration's Division of Negro Affairs. She also
founded the National Council of Negro Women and was an active member of
the National Association of Colored Women. Bethune died in May 1955.
Thirty years later in 1985, Bethune was recognized as one of the most influential
Afro-American women in the country with a postage stamp issued in her honor
and a statue of her erected in a park in Washington, DC.
This collection consists of records documenting the life of Mary McLeod Bethune,
including transcripts of interviews with Bethune, letters, and drafts
of sections of Daniel Mortimer Williams' planned biography. The records
document the Daytona School and Bethune-Cookman College as well as Bethune's
involvement with the National Council for Negro Women. The collection
includes a transcript of an interview apparently conducted in about
1939 or 1940 by Dr. Charles Spurgeon Johnson, an authority on race relations
who chaired the Sociology Department and was later the first black president
at traditionally-black Fisk University. Also included are thirty photographs
which depict Bethune, her Daytona Beach schools, and Bethune Cookman
College.
Florida Department of State
Bureau of Archives & Records Management
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