<p>William L.&nbsp;Bulkley was one of the important educators and reformers of the early 20th Century and it is time to incorporate him into the American story.</p><p>He was born to free mixed-race parents in South Carolina just as the Civil War began.&nbsp;He graduated from Claflin University in South Carolina and&nbsp;Syracuse University where he earned a PhD in Latin.&nbsp;After teaching for fourteen&nbsp;years at Claflin University Bulkley moved to New York City where he became an innovative educator established an evening school and was the first African American principal of a predominantly white school.&nbsp;He worked alongside W. E. B. Du Bois Mary White Ovington Booker T. Washington and other activists and was a founder of the NAACP and the National Urban League. Upon retirement Bulkley moved to France where he died in 1933.&nbsp;His story is told through his writings public records newspaper articles&nbsp;and archival documents.</p>