For the trip home yesterday,
my first stop was 15.7 miles from the house, on highway 178 towards Saluda,
sort of near 96, to visit the marker and
site of the birthplace of Greenwood county’s distinguished son, Dr. Benjamin
Mays. His house has since been moved to
the City of Greenwood, and I’ll be including a visit to there next trip that
way in June.
Marker
ID:
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SCHM 24-13
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Location:
|
on left
of US 178 about 1/10 mi. NW of Mays Crossroads
|
County:
|
Greenwood
|
Coordinates:
|
N 34°
03.751 W 082° 00.976
|
|
34.062517
-82.016267
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Style:
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Free
Standing
|
Benjamin Elijah
Mays (August 1,
1894 – March 28, 1984) was a United States minister, educator, scholar, social activist and the president of Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia from 1940 to 1967. Mays was also
a significant mentor to civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
and was among the most articulate and outspoken critics of segregation before
the rise of the modern civil rights movement in the United States.
Biography
Early Life & Education
Benjamin Elijah
Mays was born in 1894 in Ninety Six, South
Carolina, the youngest of eight children; his parents were tenant
farmers and former slaves. As a child, seeing his father threatened by a white
mob on horseback in the aftermath of the Phoenix Election Riot
made a deep impression.[1]
After spending
a year at Virginia Union
University, he moved north to attend Bates College in Maine,
where he obtained his B.A. in 1920, then
entered the University of Chicago
as a graduate student,
earning an M.A.
in 1925 and a Ph.D. in the School of Religion in 1935. His
education at Chicago was interrupted several times: he was ordained a Baptist minister in 1922
and accepted a pastorate at the Shiloh Baptist Church of Atlanta, then later
taught at Morehouse and at South Carolina
State College.
While in
graduate school mays worked as a Pullman Porter. He also worked as a student
assistant to Dr. Lacey Kirk Williams, pastor of Olivet Baptist Church in
Chicago and President of the National
Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.
Career
Mays' tomb in
front of Graves Hall Morehouse College's
campus green.
While working
on his doctorate, Mays and Joseph Nicholson published a study entitled The
Negro's Church, the first sociological study of the black church in the United States. Four years
later in 1938, he published The Negro's God as Reflected in His Literature.
In 1926, he was
appointed executive secretary of the Tampa, Florida Urban League. After two years at this post he
became National Student Secretary of the YMCA.
Mays accepted
the position of dean of the School
of Religion at Howard University
in Washington, D.C. in 1934. During his six years as dean, Mays traveled to India,
where, at the urging of Howard Thurman, a fellow
professor at Howard, he spoke at some length with Mahatma Gandhi.
In 1940, Mays
became the president of Morehouse College.
His most famous student there was Martin Luther King Jr.
The two developed a close relationship that continued until King's death in
1968; As his lifelong mentor, Mays delivered the eulogy for King.
Mays final stop
in academia was at South Carolina State University in Orangeburg, SC.
Mays emphasized
two themes throughout his life: the dignity of all human beings and the gap
between American democratic ideals and American social practices. Those became
key elements of the message of King and the American civil
rights movement. Mays explored these themes at length in his book Seeking
to Be a Christian in Race Relations, published in 1957.
Mays gave the benediction at the close of the official program
of the March
on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963.[2]
After his
retirement in 1967 from Morehouse, Mays was elected president of the Atlanta Public Schools
Board of Education,
where he supervised the peaceful desegregation of Atlanta's public schools. He
published two autobiographies, Born
to Rebel (1971), and Lord, the People Have Driven Me On (1981).
In 1982, he was
awarded the Spingarn Medal from
the NAACP
Mays died in
Atlanta on March 28, 1984. He was entombed on the campus of Morehouse College.
His wife Sadie is entombed beside him.
Legacy
Benjamin E. Mays
High School in Atlanta, The Mays Hall of Howard University (where the School of Divinity
is housed), and the Benjamin Mays Center at Bates College are named in Mays' honor, as well
as Benjamin E. Mays International Magnet School in St. Paul, Minnesota.[4]
Mays was a
member of the Omega Psi Phi
Fraternity. In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante
listed Benjamin Mays on his list of 100 Greatest
African Americans.[5]
The Mays family
has initiated a petition to honor Dr. Mays’ legacy through a nomination for the
high honor of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
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