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Ascension Community High School librarian Suanne Gordon reshelves books after a school renovation, a project of the U.S. military and Guyana Defense Force. 9/5/1997, NARA ID 6504646.

NationalSchoolLibrarian Day!

By Miriam Kleiman, Public Affairs

Today we honor the hard-working school librarians who patiently helped us find three sources for every paper, guided our debate team research, and brainstormed creative approaches to National History Day topics. Special shout out to Larry Rakow of Shaker High, circa 1980s!

Librarian at the card files at a high school in New Ulm MN, 10/1974. NARA ID 558218.

“Librarian,” from Labor Dept’s “Stock Photos Depicting Various Occupations, 2002 - 2007, NARA ID 81235343.

Librarian in the National Archives Library 1955. NARA ID 122213574.

"The Librarian Carefully Enters the Consignment Into Her Books” 12/1952. NARA ID 23932351

Librarian at Camp Lee, VA, WWI, NARA ID 20801744.

WPA-staffed library in Charlestown, IN. 8/26/1941. NARA ID 518271.

See also:
Books, Boots & Bridles: The Packhorse Librarians

Pack Horse Librarian Delivering Books to Children, 1/11/1938, NARA ID 148728416.

During the Depression, this Works Progress Administration/New Deal program brought books to eager readers in the far corners of Appalachia. FDR Library Education Specialist Jeffrey Urbin shares the story of FDR’s Pack Horse Library initiative carried out almost entirely by women. Watch the video.

Pack Horse Librarians, WPA records, 1/11/1938, FDR Library, NARA ID 48728414.

Mary McLeod Bethone with National Youth Administration youth, image here.

Mary McLeod Bethune to Return to Capitol Hill
(as an impressive addition to Statuary Hall)

By Miriam Kleiman, Public Affairs

We continue our celebration of Black History Month (Feb) and Women’s History Month (March) with Civil Rights icon and DC power broker extraordinaire Mary McLeod Bethune(1875-1955).

Dr. Bethune will soon join the Old Boys Club on Capitol Hill (90 of the 100 statues there are of men), as an impressive 3 ton, 11 foot statue in the Capitol’s National Statuary Hall. Created by sculptor Nilda Comas, the statue’s pedestal reads: “Invest in the human soul. Who knows, it may be a diamond in the rough.” Women’s History Month bonus! Comas will be the first Latina artist to have a sculpture in the National Statuary Hall.

Mary Jane McLeod Bethune was born in South Carolina in 1875, the 15th of 17 children to former slaves Samuel and Patsy McLeod. She was a passionate educator, community organizer, presidential advisor, Civil Rights and women’s rights activist, decades-long public servant (60 years), and patriot, in addition to mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother. Her long list of achievements include:

  • 1st Black woman to lead a federal agency.
  • 1st Black women with a university founded in her name.
  • Founder of the National Council of Negro Women to advocate for and advance rights for Black women, their families and communities.
  • Leader of FDR’s unofficial “Black Cabinet.” Used this position to creating jobs for Blacks in the federal government and New Deal agencies.
  • As Director of Negro Affairs, she was the highest paid Black government employee in 1939—with a $5,000 salary (equivalent to $100,000 today.
  • VP of the NAACP in 1940, a position she held for the rest of her life.
  • Helped establish the Women’s Army Corps (1942) and ensured it was racially integrated.
  • Archivist and chronicler of Black women’s history.
  • Bethune was the only Black woman at the founding conference of the United Nations in 1945.

Despite the attitude of some employers in refusing to hire Negros to perform needed, skilled services, and despite the denial of the same opportunities and courtesies to our youth in the armed forces of our country, we must not fail America and as Americans, we must not let America fail us.

Her life was celebrated with a memorial statue in Washington DC in 1974, and a stamp in 1985.

“We have a powerful potential in our youth, and we must have the courage to change old ideas and practices so that we may direct their power toward good ends.”

Bethune and Hoover
President Hoover invited her to the White House Conference on Child Health and Protection, and then appointed her to a commission to plan a “National Memorial Building” in DC “as a tribute to the Negro’s contribution to the achievements of America.” Congress did not back the project and private fundraising also failed. More than 80 years later, this vision became reality when the National Museum of African American History and Culture opened in DC.

Bethune and FDR
In 1935, President Roosevelt invited her to DC to serve as a Special Advisor to the National Youth Administration, and then named her National Youth Association Director of Negro Affairs, making her the first Black woman to lead a federal agency. During World War II she advocated for African American women to be allowed to serve in the Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (WACS) and Women Appointed for Voluntary Emergency Service (WAVES).

Bethune and Eleanor Roosevelt

None of us certainly can say that as yet we have perfect democracy, nor even the democracy that Abraham Lincoln and others of our great men envisioned. But I for one am proud that our country could produce a Mrs. Bethune. Your achievements are a tribute to our nation even more a tribute to your own individual spirit and effort. Eleanor Roosevelt.

Portrait of Mary McLeod Bethune, NARA ID 559194. From the Harmon Foundation, a nonprofit, private foundation for African art. More online.

Mary McLeod Bethune, Eleanor Roosevelt and others at the opening of Midway Hall, “one of two residence halls built by the Public Buildings Administration of Federal Works Agency for Negro government girls…” May 1943, NARA ID 533032.

Eleanor Roosevelt receives Mary McLeod Bethune Human Rights Award from Dorothy Height, National Council of Negro Women President, 11/12/1960, NARA ID 196283.

In her last will and testament from 1955, Dr. Bethune wrote:

I leave you hope. The Negro’s growth will be great in the years to come. Yesterday our ancestors endured the degradation of slavery, yet they retained their dignity. Today, we direct our strength toward winning a more abundant and secure life. Tomorrow, a new Negro, unhindered by race taboos and shackles, will benefit from more than 330 years of ceaseless struggle. Theirs will be a better world. This I believe with all my heart. Correspondence Between Harry S. Truman and Mary McLeod Bethune, Truman Library,

See also:

See also: The original 19th Amendment, now on view in the exhibit Rightfully Hers: American Women and the Vote, through April 10th.

 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the United Nations on December 10, 1948.  

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by the United Nations on December 10, 1948.  Eleanor Roosevelt felt it was the greatest achievement of her life.

She was part of the first American delegation to the United Nations. When the UN established a permanent Commission on Human Rights, they unanimously elected Eleanor Roosevelt as chair. She also chaired the subcommittee that drafted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights consists of a preamble and 30 articles that outline the fundamental human rights that must be universally protected. 

“Where, after all, do universal human rights begin? In small places, close to home…”

More – Eleanor Roosevelt and Human Rights for All


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