<p>&ldquo;<em>When you control a man&rsquo;s thinking you do not have to worry about his actions. You do not have to tell him not to stand here or go yonder. He will find his &lsquo;proper place&rsquo; and will stay in it. You do not need to send him to the back door.</em> <em>He will go without being told.&rdquo; </em>&ndash; Carter G. Woodson.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><strong>Carter Godwin Woodson</strong> (December 19 1875 &ndash; April 3 1950) was an African American historian author journalist.&nbsp; He was the son of former slaves.&nbsp; Being eager to gain an education he attended high school part time while mostly working in the coal mines of Kentucky.&nbsp; After a period of teaching he went onto Berea College which remarkably was co-educational interracial and charged no fees.&nbsp; Later he would attend the University of Chicago and then Harvard University where in 1912 he was the first child of former slaves to earn a doctorate.&nbsp; He had several teaching and governing roles in academia including one in teaching in the Philippines and one as Dean of the College of Liberal Arts at Howard University Washington D.C.</p><p>Woodson passionately believed in the importance of the study of African American history and culture.&nbsp; His conviction that the way these topics were approached by both whites and non-whites was detrimental to the African American cause led him to found <em>The Journal of Negro History (now The Journal of African American History).&nbsp; </em>In February 1926 he launched the celebration of &quot;Negro History Week&quot; the precursor of Black History Month<u>.</u>&nbsp; He wrote thirty varied works on the African diaspora.&nbsp; He never married quipping that he was married to his work.</p><p>In <em>The Mis-Education of the Negro</em> first published in 1933 Woodson argues that the Negro education of his time was aimed at maintaining the position of the Negro as a second class citizen in an apparently more benevolent way than the Jim Crow laws.&nbsp; It is an accessible informative and passionate book; essential reading for the understanding of race relations.&nbsp; This edition is set in a clear easy to read 11 point font.</p>
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