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The Dunbar Legacy: Dr. Paul Phillips Cooke Lecture

Anacostia Community Museum

Object Details

Creator

Anacostia Neighborhood Museum
Hutchinson, Louise Daniel (19280603-20141012)

Names

Anacostia Community Museum
Anacostia Neighborhood Museum
Dunbar High School (Washington, D.C.)
Frelinghuysen University (Washington, D.C.).
M Street High School (Washington, D.C.)
Miner Teachers College
Oberlin College
Preparatory High School for Colored Youth (Washington, D.C.)
St. Augustine's Normal School and Collegiate Institute
Université de Paris IV: Paris-Sorbonne
Wilberforce University
Cooke, Paul P.
Cooper, Anna J. (Anna Julia), 1858-1964
Cooper, George A. C., Reverend
Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt), 1868-1963
Grimké, Francis J. (Francis James), 1850-1937
Hunt, Ida Gibbs, 1862-1957
Martin-Felton, Zora
Terrell, Mary Church, 1863-1954
Washington, Booker T., 1856-1915

Collection Creator

Smithsonian Institution. Anacostia Community Museum

Citation

The Dunbar Legacy: Dr. Sterling A. Brown Lecture, Exhibition Records AV03-029, Anacostia Community Museum Archives, Smithsonian Institution.

Scope and Contents

Dr. Paul Phillips Cooke speaks on the subject of Anna J. Cooper: Teacher and Human Being. He talks about Cooper's life and the time in which she lived; and her human and religious influences. Cooke, who assisted with the Cooper exhibition at the Anacostia Neighborhood Museum, provides an overview of Cooper's history and addresses questions from the lecture audience. Cooke also provides an overview of the history of educational institutions and schools, and the education system in Washington, D.C. He discusses civil rights, legislation changes in D.C., and how civil rights legislation affected Cooper, W. E. DuBois, and Booker T. Washington. Zora Martin-Felton introduces Cooke providing a short history of his Anacostian roots.
Lecture. AV003264: Part 1. AV003220: Part 2. Part of Anna J. Cooper: A Voice from the South Audiovisual Records. AV003264 and AV003220: undated. AV001346: dated 19830925, audio only, contains part of (copy of) AV003220 recording.
sova.acma.03-029_ref907

GUID

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/qa7339fd41a-e5ad-4e20-affa-f96e5b2bc664

Local Numbers

ACMA AV003220 ACMA AV001346_B

General

Title transcribed from physical asset.

Place

Anacostia (Washington, D.C.)
Washington (D.C.)
Raleigh (N.C.)
United States

Topic

African Americans
African American women
Freedmen
African American educators
African American women educators
Women
Educators
Education
Religion
Segregation
Race
Human Rights
Civil rights
Women's rights
Civil rights leaders
African American authors
African American women authors
Authors
Social history
Slavery

Creator

Anacostia Neighborhood Museum
Hutchinson, Louise Daniel (19280603-20141012)

See more items in

Anna J. Cooper: a Voice from the South Exhibition Records
Anna J. Cooper: a Voice from the South Exhibition Records / Series ACMA AV03-029: Anna J. Cooper: a voice from the South audiovisual records

Biographical / Historical

The collection, Anna J. Cooper: A Voice from the South Audiovisual Records, contains sound and video recordings of exhibit tours, gallery talks, and lectures associated with an exhibition, Anna J. Cooper: A Voice from the South. The exhibition presented the life and times of Washington, D.C. black educator and author Anna Julia Haywood Cooper through historical documents, photographs, memorabilia, and re-creations of her home and classroom settings. It was organized by the Anacostia Neighborhood Museum and held there from February 1981 to September 1982; Louise Daniel Hutchinson served as curator. The exhibition was based on an unpublished manuscript by the late Dr. Leona Gable, Smith College; and titled after Cooper's written work, A Voice from the South: By a Black Woman of the South.;Educator, author, and speaker Anna Julia Haywood Cooper (1858-1964) was born into slavery and educated at Saint Augustine's Normal School and Collegiate Institute in Raleigh, North Carolina. While teaching at St. Augustine's, she married George A. C. Cooper, who died two years later. After her husband's death, Cooper moved to Washington, D.C., attended Oberlin College, taught at Wilberforce College and M Street High School, and later went on to earn her Ph.D. from the University of Paris-Sorbonne. Cooper taught Greek, Latin, geometry, and science; and created a path for African Americans to attend Ivy League schools. Although she taught and served as principal (1902-1906) of the M Street High School (now Dunbar High School) in Washington, D.C., her role and influence extended beyond its boundaries. Cooper was an advocate of human rights who lectured on a broad range of topics that affected blacks and women, including race relations, poverty, and gender inequality; a feminist of her day. She was a contributor to the District of Columbia's Colored Settlement House; served as president of Frelinghuysen University, which offered affordable liberal arts and professional courses for working African Americans; and wrote A Voice from the South by a Black Woman of the South, the first book-length volume of black feminist analysis in the United States.;Educator, author, statesman, and former president of the District of Columbia Teacher's College Dr. Paul Phillips Cooke (1917-2010) was born in New York City and raised in Washington, D.C. He attended Dunbar High School, Miner Teachers College, New York University, Catholic University of America, and Columbia University, where he received his doctorate. Cooke was married to Rose Cooke for 63 years.;Originally named Preparatory High School for Colored Youth and later known as M Street High School, Paul Laurence Dunbar High School, located in Washington, D.C., was the first black public high school in the United States. During the first half of the twentieth century, Dunbar was an academically elite public school with many of its teachers holding master and doctorate degrees. By the 1950s, the school was sending 80 percent of its students to college. During the late twentieth century and early twenty-first century, Dunbar struggled to keep its prestigious reputation and high standards. As with many troubled urban public schools, Dunbar standards fell and some students struggle with basic reading and math. The Dunbar Legacy Lecture Series, which was held at the Anacostia Neighborhood Museum in the early 1980s, consisted of lectures by and about people associated with Dunbar High School.

Extent

2 Video recordings (open reel, 1/2 inch)
1 Sound recording (audio cassette)

Date

circa 1981

Custodial History

Created for the Anacostia Neighborhood Museum. Curator: Louise Daniel Hutchinson. Lecture Moderator: Zora Martin-Felton.

Archival Repository

Anacostia Community Museum Archives

Identifier

ACMA.03-029, Item ACMA AV003264

Type

Archival materials
Video recordings
Sound recordings
Lectures

Genre/Form

Video recordings
Sound recordings
Lectures

Note

010542 002221 003831

Series Restrictions

Use of the materials requires an appointment. Some items are not accessible due to obsolete format and playback machinery restrictions. Please contact the archivist at acmarchives@si.edu.
ACMA.03-029_ref907
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/qa7339fd41a-e5ad-4e20-affa-f96e5b2bc664
ACMA.03-029
ACMA

Record ID

ebl-1554838806206-1554838806220-0

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Anna J. Cooper: a Voice from the South Exhibition Records


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