Winston Churchill Babe Ruth Genghis Kahn Confucius Abraham Lincoln Queen Victoria Mahatma Ghandi Albert Einstein Napoleon Bonaparte  AllBiographies' Forum
Our Dictionary
Our Math Site
free slot
 search biography names
  match all words
match any words
use wildcards
 browse biographies
get a new biography

browse by name

browse by year
 browse by category
Top 100 Categories

Categories 101-300

Categories 301-500

Categories 501-633

Dictionary and Language Portal
English Dictionary
allmath.com
math for students


travel deals
hotel rooms

Over 90 Games. $500 Welcome Bonus.


allbiographies.com privacy policy

biography classifications major works cross references
biography
name: Ovington, Mary White

sex: female
lived: (1865–1951)

biography: Civil-rights reformer, born in Brooklyn, New York, USA. Her Unitarian upbringing and attendance at the Harvard Annexe (later Radcliffe College) (1888–91) inspired her to devote herself to social reforms. She became a settlement house worker in Brooklyn (1895–1903) and also assistant secretary to the Social Reform Club of New York. It was a 1903 speech by Booker T Washington at the latter that awakened her to the continuing plight of African-Americans, and it was to improving their lot that she devoted the rest of her life. Her original studies led to Half a Man: The Status of the Negro in New York (1911), and to close associations with prominent African-Americans, particularly W E B Du Bois, and she joined him in founding the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909. She served the NAACP for some 40 years in a variety of posts, including chairman and treasurer, and in addition to helping organize it and establish its policies during these formative years, she played an invaluable role in mediating between often conflicting personalities in the movement. Although she had been a Socialist since 1905, and spoke against war and colonialism and for women's rights, she was essentially a moderate whose main goal was for the integration of the races. She wrote a syndicated newspaper column in the 1920s and several books dealing with issues of race.