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Benjamin Mays

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Benjamin Mays
6thPresident of Morehouse College
In office
August 1, 1940(1940-08-01)– July 1, 1967(1967-07-01)
Preceded byCharles D. Hubert
As Acting President
Succeeded byHugh Gloster
1st Dean of the School of Religion at
Howard University
In office
January 1, 1934 – January 3, 1941
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byJohn Moore
Personal details
Born
Benjamin Elijah Mays

(1894-08-01)August 1, 1894
Ninety Six, South Carolina,U.S.
DiedMarch 28, 1984(1984-03-28)(aged 89)
Atlanta, Georgia,U.S.
Resting placeDr. Benjamin E. Mays Memorial
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouses
Ellen Harvin
(m.1920⁠–⁠1923)
(m.1926⁠–⁠1969)
Parent(s)Louvenia Carter Mays
Hezekiah Mays
Alma materVirginia Union University
Bates College
University of Chicago
Known forCivil rights activism
Nickname(s)"Bennie"; "Buck Bennie"

Benjamin Elijah Mays(August 1, 1894 – March 28, 1984) was an American Baptist minister and American rights leader who is credited with laying the intellectual foundations of the Americancivil rights movement.Mays taught and mentored many influential activists, includingMartin Luther King Jr,Julian Bond,Maynard Jackson,andDonn Clendenon,among others. His rhetoric and intellectual pursuits focused on Black self-determination. Mays' commitment to social justice through nonviolence andcivil resistancewere cultivated from his youth through the lessons imbibed from his parents and eldest sister. The peak of his public influence coincided with his nearly three-decade tenure as the sixth president ofMorehouse College,ahistorically black institutionof higher learning, inAtlanta, Georgia.

Mays was born in theJim CrowSouth on a repurposed cotton plantation to freed sharecroppers. He traveled North to attendBates Collegeand theUniversity of Chicagofrom where he began his career in activism as a pastor in Georgia'sShiloh Baptist Church.After a brief career as a professor, he was appointed the founding Dean of the School of Religion atHoward Universityin 1934 which elevated him to national prominence as a proponent of theNew Negromovement. Six years later, Mays was tapped to lead Morehouse out of its financial insecurity. Over his tenure from 1940 to 1967, the college's financial endowment doubled, enrollment quadrupled, and it became academically competitive. By the 1960s, Mays established the college as a feeder school for "African-American firsts"in the United States.

Due to the college's small student body, Mays personally mentored many students, most notably King; the two first met in 1944. King was known as Mays' "spiritual son" and Mays his "intellectual father." After King's "I Have A Dream"speech at theMarch on Washington for Jobs and Freedomin 1963, Mays gave thebenediction.Five years later, uponKing's assassinationand death, Mays delivered the eulogy where he described King in his "No Man is Ahead of His Time"speech. Mays stepped down from the Morehouse presidency in 1967 continuing to work as a leader in the African American community through national social tours. He presided over theAtlanta Board of Educationfrom 1969 to 1978, where he initiated theracial desegregation of Atlanta.

Mays' contributions to the civil rights movement have had him credited as the "movement's intellectual conscience" or alternatively the "Dean [or Schoolmaster] of the Movement".[1][2]HistorianLawrence Carterdescribed Mays as "one of the most significant figures in American history".[3][4]Memorials includehundreds of streets,buildings, statues, awards, scholarships, grants, and fellowships named in his honor.Numerous effortshave been brought forward toposthumously awardMays thePresidential Medal of Freedomas well as feature him on aU.S. postage stamp.Mays has, since 1995, been entombed on the campus of Morehouse, with his wife, Sadie Gray, after an initial burial inAugusta.

Early life

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Early life and ancestry

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Benjamin Elijah Mays was born on August 1, 1894, in Epworth, South Carolina, in the small county ofGreenwood,South Carolina, the youngest of eight children.[5]His mother, Louvenia Carter Mays, and father, Hezekiah Mays, were born intoslaveryonVirginiaand South Carolinaplantations,respectively.[6]Both werefreedin their later lives with the passage of the 1863Emancipation Proclamation.[7]Mays' father often hit him, his siblings and Louvenia growing up, expressing anger about how he was treated by hismaster.[8]The "Mays" family name was derived from their slaver and owner's name, Henry Hazel Mays; he owned 14 slaves in the same area.[9]Hezekiah worked as a cottonsharecropperto generate income for his family.[10]

Mays was told to be cautious of white people and exhibitblack pridewhenever possible growing up.[8]Mays' older sister, Susie, began to teach him how to read before his formal schooling commenced, which gave him a year's growth in reading compared to the other students in his primary schools. School officials cited him as "destined for greatness."[11]Growing up, he went by the nickname "Bennie" and was inspired byFrederick Douglass,Booker T. Washington,andThomas E. Miller.[12]The Biblewas influential to young Mays because he could see his name (of Biblical origins) mentioned frequently, instilling a feeling of empowerment within.[13]During this time,Benjamin Tillmanrose to power in South Carolina which saw to the redoubling oflynchingandsegregationin Mays' neighborhood.[14]Throughout his tenure as governor, 18 black men were lynched and dozens were hurt in the1876 shoot-off.[15]On November 8, 1898, members of the Phoenix Riot–a white supremacist mob–rode up on horses to the Mays household, a repurposed cottonplantation.They drew their guns at Mays' father and told him to remove his hat and bow down to them.[16]The event would stay with Mays throughout his life.[16]A year later, white mobs andKu Klux Klanmembers searched his house in search of relatives after local newspapers announced that cotton prices had plummeted.[17]

Early education

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Mays traveled to Maine to study atBates Collegewhen he was 23.

In 1911, he was enrolled at the Brick House School in Epworth, aBaptist-sponsored school.[18]He then transferred to the High School Department ofSouth Carolina State CollegeinOrangeburg.He graduated in 1916, aged 22 as itsvaledictorian.[19]In high school, teachers often let Mays instruct parts of the mathematics curriculum to students in exchange for extra credit.[20]He won awards for debate and mathematics.[21]A teacher at the school had told Mays to seek graduate school at theUniversity of Chicagoas he thought the school would best nurture Mays' intellect.[21]However, before attending graduate school Mays needed to seek an undergraduate education. His relatives and teachers forced him to attend a Baptist university–theVirginia Union University.He grew weary of the violence against blacks in Virginia so he sought the guidance of his academic advisors at Virginia Union.[22]They advised him to look into schools in the North as they were typically seen as more prestigious, challenging, and prominent than those of the South.[22]

Four professors at the university had attendedBates CollegeinLewiston,Maine and urged Mays to apply.[23]However, its exacting standards prohibited him from attending. After a year more inRichmond,Mays elevated his grades to the top of his class and wrote personally to Bates presidentGeorge Colby Chase.Chase granted him a full financial aid package and boarding upon hearing his story and reviewing his academic background.[24]Virginia Union's president warned him that studies at Bates would be "too hard for a colored boy" and that he should stay in Virginia.[25]Mays ignored his warnings and enrolled in 1917, aged 23.[25]While at Bates he felt pressure to compete with "Yankeesat the Yankee level "which drove him to dedicate him to his studies.[26]He would write in a diary: "Yankee superiority was the gauntlet thrown down. I had to pick it up."[27]Working to midnight weekly and arising at 4 AM, Mays excelled atGreek,mathematics, and speech.[28]Although he would experience little racism in college, upon seeingThe Birth of a Nationin a local cinema, the crowd cheered for the white slaver which frightened Mays.[29]In college, he was captain of the debate team, played on the football team and served as the Class Day Speaker. He graduated with departmental honors with aB.A.in 1920. Contrary to popular writing and official college records, Mays never receivedPhi Beta Kappa;his attendance of a "high school school from the South" disqualified him.[30]

Marriages

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Shortly after graduation, he married his first wife, Ellen Edith Harvin, in August 1920 inNewport News,Virginia.[31]The two met when Mays was still in South Carolina and wrote to each other frequently. She was ahome economicsteacher at a local college before she died after a brief illness two years after they married at age 28.[32]He met his second wife,Sadie Gray,while working atSouth Carolina State College.After months of courtship, they married on August 9, 1926.[32]Mays kept private the details of his relationship with his second wife; he burned the majority of letters and correspondence between them.[33]

Early academic career

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Mays studied at theUniversity of Chicagoafter receiving his B.A. fromBates;he received aM.A.in 1925 andPhD.in 1935.

On January 3, 1921, he then entered theUniversity of Chicagoas a graduate student, earning anM.A.in 1925. Early on in his academic career he decided to joinOmega Psi Phi,a national fraternity for colored men.[34]This organization was known for pooling resources and information among its members so Mays viewed it with great interest. Mays viewed it as "a mountain top from which he could see above and beyond".[34]In 1924, upon hearing news that there was to be a fraternity meeting inSt. Louis,Missouri, Mays traveled by train. However, his decision to travel first class fromBirminghamto St. Louis was indirectly against theJim Crow laws.[34]The ticket salesman only sold Mays a ticket when he lied about who it was for.[34]While riding to St. Louis, the Pullman warned Mays that he was risking his life by sitting in first class and that he should get off at the next stop.[34]Shortly after, three white men, guns drawn, escorted Mays into a car in the back known as the "Jim Crow car".[35]He eventually made it to the Omega Psi Phi meeting, where he spoke of his experience.[35]

To finance his time in university, Mays worked as aPullman Porter,a railway assistant.[36]Much of the money he had earned growing up was spent financing his time at Bates, on Christmas Day 1921, Mays held only 45 dollars (equivalent to $769 in 2023).[37]Mays began labor organizing to increase his wage, which was seen negatively by the Porter managers. Although he legally established a labor group for Pullman Porters, he was fired from his job for "attracting too much attention tolabor rights."[37]His time at the University of Chicago was marked bysegregation.He was asked to sit at the colored area in the dining halls and was only allowed to use certain rooms for reading.[38]Mays tolerated the segregation with the mindset that he was "only there to get a degree, to convince another brilliant set of Yankees that he could do their work."[38]Although he was licensed to preach in 1919, he was officiallyordaineda Baptist minister in 1921.[38]During this time he encountered John Hope, the current president ofMorehouse College.Hope spoke to Mays about the lack of "a fine education for the colored in Atlanta".[37]Mays traveled to Atlanta in 1921 and served as a pastor at the Shiloh Baptist Church until 1923.[39]In March 1925, Mays was award an M.A. in religious studies from the university.[40]Upon receiving his master's degree, he wrote to the pastorate with his intention of resigning to pursue a doctorate in the coming years.[41]However, due to his financial status, he took up a teaching position instructing English atSouth Carolina State Collegefrom 1925 to 1926.[42]Mays left his teaching position after routinely clashing with other faculty overgrade inflationand academic standards.[43]

In 1926, he moved toTampa, Florida,to serve as the director of the TampaUrban League.While there, the Urban League produced what became known as the "Mays Report", which detailed the growth of Tampa's African-American communities and the difficulties they experienced living in segregated neighborhoods. Though he did not stay in the area for long, Mays made enough of an impact on the nascent push for civil rights in the region that he has been honored with a bust on theTampa RiverwalkHistorical Monument Trail.[44]From 1928 to 1930, he lived in Atlanta and served as the national student secretary of theYoung Men's Christian Association(YMCA).[43]A couple of months later, he was asked to serve as the director of Study of Black Churches in the United States by the Institute of Social and Religious Research of New York.[45]In 1932, Mays returned to the University of Chicago with the intent of completing a Ph.D. in line with what was asked by the Institute of Social and Religious Research of New York.[40]After some deliberation between fields of studies he could pursue a doctorate in, he eventually decided to study religion and not mathematics or philosophy.[41]Mays also worked as a student assistant to Dr. Lacey Kirk Williams, pastor ofOlivet Baptist Churchin Chicago and President of theNational Baptist Convention.[32]In 1933, he wrote his first book with Joseph Nicholson,The Negro's Church.It was the first sociological study of theblack churchin the United States and was submitted to the university faculty as his dissertation in 1935.[46]Historian John Herbert Roper estimates that Mays was one of 20 African Americans to earn a doctorate during that year.[47]

Howard University

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Mays worked atHoward Universityfrom 1934 to 1940.

Shortly after receiving his doctorate, he was called by the presidents of multiple universities to lead their religion departments.[48]Mays chose to accept a position atHoward UniversityinWashingtonas its dean of religious studies.[49]He was instructed to build up the department and establish a reputation for well-trained ministers.[49]Mays first renovated its library and secured loans from the federal government to expand it.[50]His second objective was to separate the federally-funded portions of Howard University from the new school of religion. At the time, the university was partially funded by theU.S. Department of the Interiorwhich prohibited funding to religious enterprises.[51]After he successfully removed the School of Religion from the auspices of the federal government he was tasked with securing funding from wealthy donors from the North.[52]

Mays secured a multi-million dollar package from donors by 1930, and was averaging yearly contributions of $750,000 during theGreat Depression.[52]The expanding Department of the Interior underFranklin D. Roosevelt,coupled with Mays' fundraising led to unprecedented growth at the university.[53]Salaries for professors increased, new dorms were built and refurbished, the library Mays had been developing was completed, and new lecture halls were established.[53]In 1938, he published his second book,The Negro's God as Reflected in His Literature.In 1939, he secured a large collection of theology books for his new library which prompted theAmerican Association of Theological Schoolsto accredit the new School of Religion.[54]During this time Mays developed a reputation for exacting standards and elitism.[55]He was a vocal opponent of the notion that black men are inherently more violent than their white counterparts in universities.[56]He was a vocal proponent of theNew Negromovement and frequently lectured about its foundlings and applications.[57]

In January 1940, Mays was secretly approached byJohn Hervey Wheeler,a trustee ofMorehouse College,to see if he was interested in an upcoming search for the college's next president.[58]Wheeler told Mays that the school had a tough time with getting tuition payments out of the students, growing theirendowment,and establishing national prominence.[59]Mays expressed interest in the position but Wheeler cautioned him about the odds of him actually being offered the job.[59]On March 10, 1940, Mays was offered the presidency of Morehouse by its trustees; he moved to Atlanta shortly after.[59]When Mays left Howard University, he was honored with the renaming of the newly constructed home of the divinity school to "Benjamin Mays Hall."[32]

Meeting with Gandhi

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In 1936–37, Mays traveled toMysore,India, where, at the urging ofHoward Thurman,a fellow professor at Howard, he spoke at some length withMahatma Gandhi.[57]The two spoke for an hour and a half about the realities and powers ofmilitant pacifismwhich he used to shape his civil rights ideology and practice.[60]Mays asked Gandhi about the influencenonviolencehad in his life and what his personal thoughts were on thecaste system in India.[61]Gandhi told Mays that there was never an instance where violence was acceptable especially that which was undertaken in retaliation.[61]He was told that "one must pay the price for protest, even with one's life".[61]In response to the caste system. Gandhi believed that there those with darker skin were not inherently untouchable but labeled it a "necessary economic injustice".[62]

Morehouse College, 1940–1967

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Early years

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Mays as the 6th president ofMorehouse College.

Mays was offered the presidency on March 10 and inaugurated the sixth president on August 1, 1940.[63]Upon his assumption of the presidency, the school was in severe financial distress.[63]In his first speech to an incoming freshman class in 1940, he said, "If Morehouse is to continue to be great; it must continue to produce outstanding personalities."[64]Mays set out to improve the training of Morehouse men, increase enrollment, grow its endowment, and collect tuition payments.[63]

Many associated with the college referenced him as a "builder of men."[32]To improve the training of Morehouse men, Mays set out to advance a new curriculum based on theNew Negromovement.[65]He specifically wished to increase the training of black physicians, ministers and lawyers.[65]Although Morehouse College was not amedical,law,orministry school,it was a feeder institution into them so Mays took the preparation of his students into these schools seriously.[65]

Financial planning

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During his first three months nothing was planned to be or currently being constructed on campus.[63]Mays had inherited "mountains of uncollected student bills" which served as a threat to theliquidityof the college.[63]In 1933, Morehouse was doing so poorly financially that it had allowedAtlanta Universityto take over its financial direction and budget. He earned a reputation for being apenny-pincherand demanded tuition fees on time, which earned him the nickname "Buck Bennie;" the student newspaper occasionally ran headlines such as "Buck Bennie Rides Again," during the first couple of years of his Morehouse presidency.[45]However, he often helped students pay their bills by offering work or finding it around campus. He would write to the employers of the college's graduates to ask them how the recent grads were doing as a way to measure the Morehouse education.[45]Within two years of his presidency, Mays was so successful that he was able to regain control of Morehouse's finances.[66]

Effects of World War II

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Soon after primary advancements were made with the college,World War IIbroke out and many students weredrafted for military service.The Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Morehouse approached Mays and requested the school be shut down for the remainder of the war, which prompted Mays to lash out and reject his proposition publicly. Mays counter-proposal was to open the school to younger students who were ineligible to be drafted. He moved to improve the academic quality of the students by lowering admissions rates, and reforming the academic platform. College faculty were often encouraged to befriend students and provided them with guidance in a tumultuous social scene at the time.[32]

Recognition

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The introduction to his speech compilation at Morehouse notes him with the following:

In physical stature Mays stood six feet tall, but appeared taller because of his erect posture--a habit he developed during his youth to walk around with dignity and pride; he weighed approximately 180 pounds and had a full head of iron-grey air with a contrasting dark complexion. His distinctive physical appearance commented his towering intellectual stature. When Mays walked into a room, eyes were likely to focus in his direction. His mere physical presence attracted attention.[45]

He received anhonorary doctorateand the "Alumnus of the Year" Award fromBates Collegein 1947 and theUniversity of Chicagoin 1949, respectively.[67]Although he was a college president, he was not allowed to vote in the 1950s until he was 52 years old.[45]Pulpit,a magazine focusing on black religious preachers, ranked him among the top 20 preachers in America in 1954. The same year he was one of the "Top Ten Most Powerful Negros" in the nation according to black magazine,Our World.[45]

Jackie Robinson

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In 1966, as president, Mays was invited to sit at anAtlanta Bravesbaseball game as a guest-of-honor byJackie Robinsonwhen the sports franchise moved from Milwaukee to Atlanta. Robinson invited Mays because of his efforts to integrate the baseball team in Atlanta. Robinson said of Mays: "When we first moved here it was the first team of major league caliber to ever move this far south to play baseball. And of course [Mays] was one of the guys, one of the persons really that made things a lot easier for myself and some of the other black ball players."[68]

Roles in the White House

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Jimmy Carter,withCoretta Scott King,Martin Luther King, Sr, and Mays
Mays (right ofRobert F. Kennedy) at theWhite House

As president he was in great demand as a public speaker. He met hundreds of national and international leaders and served as a trusted advisor to PresidentsKennedy,Johnson,andCarter.He was appointed by PresidentTrumanto the Mid-Century White House Conference on Children and Youth. WhenPope John XXIIIdied in 1963, President Kennedy sent Mays and his Vice President to represent the United States at the funeral inRome, Italy.[69]During the Kennedy administration, southern members of the Senate blocked Mays' appointment to theUnited States Civil Rights Commissionby accusing him of being aCommunist.Mays denied the charges.[70]His relationship with President Jimmy Carter was marked with "warmth" and "hospitality." Carter visited Mays' home in Atlanta, and Mays in turn campaigned for Carter during his1976and1980presidential runs. Carter wrote to Mays on a monthly basis during his presidency asking him about "human rights, international affairs, and discrimination."[45]

Final years

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Mays wanted to hire more teachers, and to pay those teachers a better salary. To do that, Mays sought to be more strict in the collection of student fees, and wanted to increase Morehouse's endowment from $1,114,000. He more than quadrupled the endowment that he inherited by the end of his 27-year tenure.[66][71]Over Mays' twenty-seven years leading Morehouse, the enrollment increased 169%, from 238 to almost a thousand students and furthered the motivation for graduates to pursue graduate studies.[45]

Connection to Martin Luther King Jr.

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Martin Luther King Jr.considered Mays his "spiritual father".

Mays first became associated withMartin Luther King Jr.during his time as a student at Morehouse College.[1]While King was a student from 1944 to 1948 he often went to Morehouse's chapel to hear Mays preach. After the sermons, King would run up to Mays and engage with him about the ideas he presented often following him into his office, hours after the sermon ended.[45]He was also a friend of Martin Luther King Jr.'s father,Martin Luther King Sr.and often participated with him in religious organizations in Atlanta. Mays dined at the King's homes from time to time and spoke with the young Martin Luther King Jr. about his career prospects and ambitions. His mother,Alberta Williams Kingsaid Mays was a "great influence on Martin Luther King Jr.," "[an] example of what kind of minister Martin could become," and "possessor of great moral principles."[45]

While King was only in his 20s, Mays helped him assume the responsibility of his actions in the civil rights rallies in which he participated. King needed Mays "for spiritual support as he faced the burden of being perceived as the personification of black America's hopes and dreams, it was Mays who held the job as King's consigliere over the next fourteen years as the death threats against him grew more ominous and the public battles more dangerous."[1]

After King gained national attention as a consequence of his1955 Montgomery bus boycott,he began to refer to Mays as his "spiritual and intellectual mentor", which enhanced the friendship they had and prompted Mays to be more involved with King's civil rights endeavors. Mays revered him as his "spiritual son".[1]Mays gave thebenedictionat the close of the official program of theMarch on Washington for Jobs and Freedom,where King delivered his"I Have a Dream" speechin 1963.[72][73]

"No man is ahead of his time" speech

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External audio
audio iconNo Man Is Ahead of His Time - Dr. Benjamin E. Mays delivers Dr. King's EulogyMount Zion Progressive Missionary Baptist Church, April 9, 1968

The two developed a close relationship that continued untilKing's assassinationbyJames Earl Rayon April 4, 1968.[74]King and Mays promised each other that whoever outlived the other would deliver the eulogy at the other's funeral.[75][76]

On April 9, 1968, Mays delivered a eulogy that would later be known as the "No Man is Ahead of His Time"speech.[75]He noted King's time in history to an estimated 150,000 mourners[75]by stating in his most famous passage:

If Jesus was called to preach the Gospel to the poor,Martin Lutherwas called to give dignity to the common man. If a prophet is one who interprets in clear and intelligible language the will of God, Martin Luther King Jr. fits that designation. If a prophet is one who does not seek popular causes to espouse, but rather the causes he thinks are right, Martin Luther qualified on that score. No! He was not ahead of his time. No man is ahead of his time. Every man is within his star, each in his time. Each man must respond to the call of God in his lifetime and not in somebody else's time. Jesus had to respond to the call of God in the first century A.D., and not in the 20th century. He had but one life to live. He couldn't wait.[75]

The speech was well received by the attendants of the funeral and the American public.[77]It was later hailed as "a masterpiece of twentieth century oratory."[45]After the death of King, Mays drew controversy when his sermon at theEbenezer Baptist Churchurged an audience of mostly white people "not to dishonor [King's] name by trying to solve our problems through rioting in the streets. If they could turn their sorrow into hope for the future and use their outrage to invigorate a peaceful climb to the mountaintop, Martin Luther King Jr. will have died a redemptive death from which all mankind will benefit."[1]

After Morehouse, 1967–1981

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Social tours and advocacy

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Mays, during his social tours, was honored at theSouth Carolina State Housein 1978.

Mays began teaching again, and served as a private advisor to the president ofMichigan State Universityand went on to publishDisturbed About Man,a collection of his sermons at Morehouse College. His publications described his early life in South Carolina and the racial tensions he had to overcome. During this time he began to give speeches and commencement addresses at various institutions to spread both religious and racial tolerance. He ended his social tours in the early 1980s, giving a total of 250 commencement addresses at colleges, universities, and schools. In 1978, theU.S. Department of Educationgranted him the Distinguished Educator Award and theSouth Carolina State Househung a commissioned portrait of him in its chamber.[78]These awards from South Carolina were deeply appreciated by Mays as he left the state in fear of his life and this he loved. During the social transformation of the South in the 1970s, Mays' legacy in his birthplace was solidified and he took on the title of "native son".[45][79][80]

Atlanta board presidency

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At age seventy-five, Mays was elected president of theAtlanta Public SchoolsBoard of Education,where he supervised the peaceful desegregation of Atlanta's public schools as a consequence of the 1970 federal court order. Members of the board argued that since the bussing was not a part of their system they did not have to create one for desegregation; however, the idea was shot down by Mays, who cited theSwann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of EducationSupreme Court decision.[78]It was during this time that Mays ordered the city to create bus routes to cater to African-American neighborhoods. The board did not support the decision and asked Georgia's Attorney General, Arthur K. Bolton, for a review of the case. Bolton brought the city government together with the board and with Mays created what was known as theAtlanta Compromise Plan.[78]

His "commanding and demanding personality" was largely credited for the exponential levels of desegregation in Atlanta.[32]The Atlanta Compromise Plan prompted Mays to advocate for the administration of the plan to be "colorless", that is to say, black and white students were transported on the same routes, in the same buses. This was named the "Majority to Minority" volunteer plan, better known as the "M to M" plan. The plan also allowed each student whose race was in the majority at a school to transfer to a school where they would be in the minority race; this was advantageous to the black populace of Atlanta. The program was later known as the "Volunteer Transfer Program" or VTP, and was ministered by the federal courts and the board. On July 28, 1974, Mays signed the alignment order declaring that theAtlanta School Systemwas unitary.[78]

On July 1, 1973, Mays appointed Alonzo Crim as the first African-American superintendent of schools, which was met with backlash from the other board members and city officials. He used his power and influence in Atlanta to shield Crim from the criticism and allowed him the opportunity to run the school system.[78]During the later part of his tenure he greatly expanded the jurisdiction of the board, and upon his retirement in 1981 Mays was honored by the naming of a street. Near the end of his tenure, the board voted to name a newly constructed school after Mays;Mays High Schoolwas constructed on February 10, 1985, and was open to students of all races. He retired from the board in 1981.[32]The Atlanta Board of Education had a rule against naming buildings after people unless they had been deceased for two years; they waived it for Mays; he visited the school frequently when it was being built.[78]He is widely credited as the most influential figure in thedesegregation of Atlanta,Georgia.[32]

Death and legacy

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A statue of Mays sits feet away from his memorial on the grounds ofMorehouse College.

Benjamin Mays died on March 28, 1984, inAtlanta,Georgia. He was initially buried atSouth-View Cemetery,but in May 1995 his body wasentombedon the campus ofMorehouse Collegealong with his wife Sadie.[81][82]Morehouse College established the Benjamin E. Mays Scholarship shortly after his death.[67]

Boston Universityprofessor Lawrence Carter described Mays as "one of the most significant figures in American history."[68]Andrew Youngsaid of Mays: "if there hadn't of been [sic] a Benjamin Mays there would not have been aMartin Luther King Jr.He was very much a product of Dr. Mays religious thinking. "[83][84][85]He was known toDillard UniversitypresidentSamuel DuBois Cookas "[one of the] great architects of the civil rights movement. Not only in training individuals but in writing his books, leadership in churches, as a pastor, college president. He set the standard. And he was uncompromising."[68]In 2002, scholarMolefi Kete Asantelisted Benjamin Mays on his list of100 Greatest African Americans.[86]

Sites and honors

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In his home state ofSouth Carolinaa portrait of Mayes,[87]painted by artistLarry Francis Lebby,was placed in the gallery of the South Carolina House chambers in 1981.[88]Mayes was inducted into the South Carolina Hall of Fame in 1984.[89]His childhood home was relocated from Epworth toGreenwood, SCand is listed as a State Historic Site by the government of South Carolina,[90]being referred to as an "education icon" by the South Carolina Radio Network in 2011.[91]Upon his death Mays was designatedPhi Beta Kappa,Delta Sigma Rho,Delta Theta Chi,Omega Psi Phi.[89]

Nationally, he was awarded theSpingarn Medalfrom theNational Association for the Advancement of Colored Peoplein 1982.[92][93]He was elected to theSchomburg Honor Roll of Race Relationsalong with "only a dozen major leaders to be so honored."[94]In 2011,Williams CollegeinWilliamstown, Massachusetts,introduced the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship at Williams College.[70]TheNational School Boards Associationcreated the Benjamin Elijah Mays Lifetime Achievement Award for "an individual who—during his or her lifetime—has demonstrated a longstanding commitment to the educational needs of urban school children through his or her service as a local school board member."[95]Due to his stature in academia he was frequently awardedhonorary degreesfrom universities. He was awarded 40 of them during his lifetime[96]and as of February 2018, he has received 56 honorary degrees.[32]

Bates College's highest alumni distinction is known as the Benjamin E. Mays Medal and is reserved for "the alumna or alumnus who has performed distinguished service to the larger (worldwide) community and been deemed a graduate of outstanding accomplishment." The inaugural winner was Mays himself.[97]The college established the Benjamin E. Mays Distinguished Professorship in 1985.[78]

Mays has been the subject or inspiration ofmemorials,and theeponymof hundreds of buildings, schools, streets, halls, awards, grants, scholarships, fellowships, and statues. Although he through his life had been appreciative of all of them, he "[was] reported to have said he was moved most deeply when a small black church inNinety Six, South Carolina,renamed itself Mays United Methodist Church.[98]There are numerous memorials to Mays in the United States, including:[99][76][100][101][45]

Bust of Mays along theTampa Riverwalkin Florida, 2022
  • Benjamin Elijah Mays High School,in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
  • Benjamin E. Mays Drive in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
  • Benjamin E. Mays Archives in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
  • Benjamin E. Mays National Memorial in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
  • The Statue of Benjamin E. Mays at Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
  • Benjamin Mays Hall ofHoward University,in Washington, D.C., U.S.[102]
  • Benjamin Mays Centerof Bates College, in Lewiston, Maine, U.S.
  • Benjamin E. Mays International Magnet School, in St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.
  • Mays House Museum, in Greenwood, South Carolina, U.S.[103]
  • Benjamin Mays Historic Site, in Greenwood, South Carolina, U.S.
  • Dr Benjamin E. Mays Elementary School in Greenwood, South Carolina, U.S.[104]
  • Mays United Methodist Church, in Ninety Six, South Carolina, U.S.
  • Mays Crossroads on Highway 171 in Ninety Six, South Carolina, U.S.
  • Benjamin E. Mays Elementary Academy, in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
  • Benjamin E. Mays High School in Pacolet, South Carolina, U.S.

Medal of Freedom effort

[edit]

After Mays stepped down from the Atlanta Board of Education presidency in 1981, a petition was sent to the desk of U.S. PresidentRonald Reaganrequesting that Mays be given thePresidential Medal of Freedom,but it was turned down. Georgian representativeJohn Lewisproposed a bill in January 1993 that would commemorate Mays on a federal stamp and requested that Mays be given the Medal of Freedomposthumously.The request was sent to U.S. PresidentBill Clintonbut his time as president ended before he could address the request. A request was sent once again to U.S. PresidentGeorge W. Bushby Georgian representativesMax ClelandandZell Millerwhich passed both houses of Congress but has yet to be signed by a U.S. president.[105]The petition was sent once more in 2012 to U.S. PresidentBarack Obama,yet failed to be awarded.[106]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcde"Benjamin Mays found a voice for civil rights".The University of Chicago.April 4, 2017.RetrievedSeptember 20,2018.
  2. ^Prial, Frank J. (November 3, 1984)."Benjamin Mays, Educator, Dies; Served as Inspiration to Dr. King".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.RetrievedSeptember 20,2018.
  3. ^"Mays and King".November 2, 2008.RetrievedSeptember 20,2018.
  4. ^Jelks 2012,p. 292–98.
  5. ^Roper 2012,p. 5.
  6. ^Roper 2012,pp. 5–6.
  7. ^Mays House Museum."Mays House Museum - History".Archived fromthe originalon January 22, 2016.
  8. ^abRoper 2012,p. 6.
  9. ^Roper 2012,pp. 7, 10.
  10. ^Roper 2012,p. 11.
  11. ^Dumas 2006,p. 33.
  12. ^Roper 2012,p. 12.
  13. ^Roper 2012,p. 13.
  14. ^Roper 2012,pp. 17–18.
  15. ^Roper 2012,p. 25.
  16. ^abRoper 2012,p. 15.
  17. ^Roper 2012,p. 33.
  18. ^Roper 2012,p. 35.
  19. ^Roper 2012,pp. 44–46.
  20. ^Roper 2012,p. 47.
  21. ^abRoper 2012,p. 52.
  22. ^abRoper 2012,p. 55.
  23. ^Roper 2012,p. 55–57.
  24. ^Roper 2012,p. 59, 60, 62–64.
  25. ^abRoper 2012,p. 59.
  26. ^Roper 2012,p. 60.
  27. ^Roper 2012,p. 61.
  28. ^Roper 2012,p. 64.
  29. ^Roper 2012,p. 68.
  30. ^Roper 2012,p. 71.
  31. ^Roper 2012,p. 73.
  32. ^abcdefghijDumas, Carrie (2006).Benjamin Elijah Mays.Ladd Library, Bates College, Lewiston, Maine: Mercer University Press. pp. 33, 144, 200.ISBN0881460168.
  33. ^Roper 2012,p. 75.
  34. ^abcdeRoper 2012,p. 107.
  35. ^abRoper 2012,p. 108.
  36. ^Roper 2012,p. 79.
  37. ^abcRoper 2012,p. 80.
  38. ^abcRoper 2012,p. 81.
  39. ^College, Morehouse."Morehouse College | Benjamin E. Mays Bio".www.morehouse.edu.RetrievedFebruary 22,2018.
  40. ^abRoper 2012,p. 117.
  41. ^abRoper 2012,p. 118.
  42. ^Roper 2012,p. 119.
  43. ^abRoper 2012,p. 126.
  44. ^"Tampa Riverwalk Monument Trail: Benjamin Elijah Mays".thetampariverwalk.com.Friends of the Tampa Riverwalk.RetrievedMarch 16,2022.
  45. ^abcdefghijklmColston, Freddie C. (October 1, 2002).Dr. Benjamin E. Mays Speaks: Representative Speeches of a Great American Orator.University Press of America.ISBN9780761823438.
  46. ^Roper 2012,pp. 150, 156.
  47. ^Roper 2012,p. 159.
  48. ^Roper 2012,p. 174.
  49. ^abRoper 2012,p. 175.
  50. ^Roper 2012,p. 180.
  51. ^Roper 2012,p. 181.
  52. ^abRoper 2012,p. 182.
  53. ^abRoper 2012,p. 183.
  54. ^Roper 2012,p. 189.
  55. ^Roper (2012,p. 182) states: "Mays was not afraid to be an elitist, but he preferred the treat of merit, value, and worthiness."
  56. ^Roper 2012,p. 192.
  57. ^abRoper 2012,p. 193.
  58. ^Roper 2012,p. 204.
  59. ^abcRoper 2012,p. 205.
  60. ^Roper 2012,pp. 193–95.
  61. ^abcRoper 2012,p. 195.
  62. ^Roper 2012,p. 196.
  63. ^abcdeRoper 2012,p. 208.
  64. ^Jelks, Randal Maurice. Benjamin Elijah Mays, Schoolmaster of the Movement: A Biography. Chapel Hill, NC, USA: University of North Carolina Press, 2012. ProQuest ebrary. Web. 5 November 2014.
  65. ^abcRoper 2012,p. 210.
  66. ^abMays, Benjamin E.. Born to Rebel: An Autobiography. Athens, GA, USA: University of Georgia Press, 2003. ProQuest ebrary. Web. 5 November 2014.
  67. ^abMays, Benjamin Elijah (January 1, 2002).Dr. Benjamin E. Mays Speaks: Representative Speeches of a Great American Orator.University Press of America.ISBN9780761823438.
  68. ^abc"Transcript-Benjamin Mays"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on April 20, 2017.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  69. ^"The Life of Benjamin Elijah Mays".Archived fromthe originalon January 22, 2016.
  70. ^ab"Introduction to MMUF and Dr. Benjamin E. Mays".Special Academic Programs.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  71. ^Roper, John Herbert.Magnificent Mays: A Biography of Benjamin Elijah Mays. Columbia, SC, USA: University of South Carolina Press, 2012. ProQuest ebrary. Web. 5 November 2014.
  72. ^"HD Stock Video Footage - Dr. Benjamin E. Mays delivering benediction prayer at conclusion of" March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom "".www.CriticalPast.com.RetrievedMay 28,2017.
  73. ^"Benjamin Mays benediction".C-SPAN.org.RetrievedMarch 7,2016.
  74. ^"King Encyclopedia,"http://mlk-kpp01.stanford.edu/kingweb/about_king/encyclopedia/mays_benjamin.htm.
  75. ^abcd"April 1968: Benjamin Mays '20 delivers final eulogy for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. | 150 Years | Bates College".www.bates.edu.March 22, 2010.RetrievedSeptember 20,2018.
  76. ^ab"Mays House Museum".RetrievedSeptember 20,2018.
  77. ^"April 1968: Benjamin Mays '20 delivers final eulogy for the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. | 150 Years | Bates College".www.Bates.edu.March 22, 2010.RetrievedApril 20,2017.
  78. ^abcdefgDumas, Carrie M.; Hunter, Julie (April 19, 2017).Benjamin Elijah Mays: A Pictorial Life and Times.Mercer University Press.ISBN9780881460162.
  79. ^College, Morehouse."Morehouse College | Benjamin E. Mays Bio".www.Morehouse.edu.RetrievedApril 20,2017.
  80. ^"Greenwood to honor education icon, native son (AUDIO)".South Carolina Radio Network.April 25, 2011. Archived fromthe originalon April 20, 2017.RetrievedApril 20,2017.
  81. ^Hagans, Gail; Manuel, Marlon (May 22, 1995)."At two resilient schools, it's time to celebrate".Atlanta Journal-Constitution.p. B4.Archivedfrom the original on June 8, 2020.RetrievedJune 7,2020– vianewspapers.com....the remains of Morehouse luminary Benjamin E. Mays and his wife, Sadie, were moved from Southview Cemetery late Saturday and placed in a marble memorial on the school campus Sunday.
  82. ^"Dr. Benjamin E. Mays | MMUF".www.mmuf.org.RetrievedFebruary 21,2018.
  83. ^"The Benjamin Mays Model | Inside Higher Ed".RetrievedJanuary 12,2018.
  84. ^"Benjamin Mays found a voice for civil rights".The University of Chicago.RetrievedJanuary 12,2018.
  85. ^"Benjamin Mays (ca. 1894-1984)".New Georgia Encyclopedia.RetrievedJanuary 12,2018.
  86. ^Asante, Molefi Kete (2002).100 Greatest African Americans: A Biographical Encyclopedia.Amherst, New York. Prometheus Books.ISBN1-57392-963-8.
  87. ^Benjamin Elijah Mays 1894-1984 ".South Carolina State House Gallery Portraits.2023. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  88. ^Ronnick, Michele Valerie (2023). "Preaching with the Choir: An Easter Sermon with Dr. Benjamin E. Mays at South Carolina State University, Orangeburg, SC".Picturing Black History: Photographs and stories that changed the world.Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  89. ^ab"Benjamin Mays facts, information, pictures | Encyclopedia.com articles about Benjamin Mays".www.encyclopedia.com.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  90. ^"Benjamin Mays Historic Site".discoversouthcarolina.com.Archived fromthe originalon April 20, 2017.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  91. ^"Greenwood to honor education icon, native son (AUDIO)".South Carolina Radio Network.April 25, 2011. Archived fromthe originalon April 20, 2017.RetrievedApril 20,2017.
  92. ^"Dr. Benjamin E. Mays - Alonzo A. Crim Center for Urban Educational Excellence".crim.education.gsu.edu.RetrievedMarch 7,2016.
  93. ^"NAACP Spingarn Medal".Archived fromthe originalon August 2, 2014.
  94. ^"Dr. Benjamin E. Mays | MMUF".www.mmuf.org.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  95. ^"Benjamin Elijah Mays Lifetime Achievement Award | National School Boards Association".www.NSBA.org.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  96. ^"Benjamin E. Mays Biography at Black History Now".Black Heritage Commemorative Society.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  97. ^"Benjamin Mays Medal"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on March 8, 2016.
  98. ^"Benjamin E. Mays Biography at Black History Now".Black Heritage Commemorative Society.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  99. ^"Benjamin E. Mays IB World School / HOME".BenMays.SPPS.org.RetrievedMay 28,2017.
  100. ^"Our History".www.MaysAcademy.com.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  101. ^"Benjamin Mays Historic Site".DiscoverSouthCarolina.com.Archived fromthe originalon April 20, 2017.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  102. ^"About Howard University East Campus".
  103. ^"Benjamin e. Mays House Museum – US Civil Rights Trail".
  104. ^"D50 school board votes to rename Springfield after Benjamin Mays".Index-Journal.February 17, 2020.RetrievedFebruary 25,2020.
  105. ^"Presidential Medal of Freedom for Benjamin Mays '20?".March 1, 2001.RetrievedApril 19,2017.
  106. ^"Letter to the Editor: A Petition to Honor Dr. Benjamin E. Mays with the Presidential Medal of Freedom".Cascade, GA Patch.January 18, 2012.RetrievedApril 19,2017.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Jelks, Randal Maurice (2012).Benjamin Elijah Mays, schoolmaster of the movement: a biography.Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina.ISBN978-0-8078-6987-1.
  • Roper, John Herbert (2012).The magnificent Mays: a biography of Benjamin Elijah Mays.Columbia: The University of South Carolina Press.ISBN9781611170771.
  • Lawler, Milton (2011).Benjamin E. Mays: the role of character in the prolonged struggle for African American civil rights.Oxon Hill, MD: The Lawler Association.ISBN9780985451202.
  • Rovaris, Dereck Joseph (2005).Mays and Morehouse: how Benjamin E. Mays developed Morehouse College, 1940-1967.Silver Spring, Md.: Beckham House.ISBN0931761891.
[edit]

Newberry, Brittany; Tanner, Sarah."Born to Rebel: The Life and Legacy of Benjamin E. Mays".Digital Exhibits.Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library.