Mary Mcleod Bethune: A Social Activist

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Mary McLeod Bethune was a teacher and a social equality lobbyist who lived from 1875 until 1955. She was conceived in South Carolina to previous slaves. She finished Scotia Seminary for Girls and trusted that training was the way to progressing racial correspondence. In 1904 she established what is today known as the Bethune-Cookman College took after by the National Council of Negro Women in the year 1935. She proceeded as a teacher and extremist until her demise in 1955.

Growing up poor, she was one of seventeen offspring of previous slaved. Everybody in her family worked in the fields regardless of being "free". She was the main tyke in her family to get a training from a close-by preacher school for African American kids. She strolled

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