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RALEIGH, N.C. — John Hope Franklin, a Rentiesville native who became a
revered Duke University historian and scholar of life in the South and the
African-American experience in the United States, died Wednesday. He was
94.
Duke spokesman David Jarmul said Franklin died of congestive heart
failure at the university’s hospital in Durham.
Born and raised in an all-black community in McIntosh County where he
was often subjected to humiliating incidents of racism, he was later
instrumental in bringing down the legal and historical validations of such
a world.
Lansing Lee, director of Muskogee’s Martin Luther King Center, recalled
growing up nspired by the Oklahoma historian and later meeting him.
“When I was young and looking for a role model, his name came up
immediately because he was a historian and because he came from
Rentiesville, humble beginnings,” said Lee, director of Muskogee’s Martin
Luther King Center. “Franklin said there were ‘patterns of possibilities’
and in my mind, it became a possibility.”
Lee also recalled being struck by Franklin’s sense of humility.
“He was humble, but very encouraging, to the point that you felt he was
not someone famous, but an older relative who wanted to get people
involved.”
“Many people are standing in his shadow,” said Wally Waits, former head
of the genealogy department at Muskogee Public Library. “He was quite
noted for his accomplishments and well-respected. He crossed barriers
intellectually and culturally, and that crossing of barriers required
great character.”
As an author, his book “From Slavery to Freedom” was a landmark
integration of black history into American history that remains relevant
more than 60 years after being published. As a scholar, his research
helped Thurgood Marshall and his team at the NAACP win Brown v. Board of
Education, the 1954 case that barred the doctrine of “separate but equal”
in the nation’s public schools.
“It was evident how much the lawyers appreciated what the historians
could offer,” Franklin later wrote. “For me, and I suspect the same was
true for the others, it was exhilarating.”
Franklin himself broke numerous color barriers. He was the first black
department chair at a predominantly white institution, Brooklyn College;
the first black professor to hold an endowed chair at Duke; and the first
black president of the American Historical Association.
He often regarded his country like an exasperated relative, frustrated
by racism’s stubborn power, yet refusing to give up. “I want to be out
there on the firing line, helping, directing or doing something to try to
make this a better world, a better place to live,” Franklin told The
Associated Press in 2005.
In November, after Barack Obama broke the ultimate racial barrier in
American politics, Franklin called his ascension to the White House “one
of the most historic moments, if not the most historic moment, in the
history of this country.”
“Because of the life John Hope Franklin lived, the public service he
rendered, and the scholarship that was the mark of his distinguished
career, we all have a richer understanding of who we are as Americans and
our journey as a people,” Obama said in a statement. “Dr. Franklin will be
deeply missed, but his legacy is one that will surely endure.”
Obama’s achievement fit with Franklin’s mission as a historian, to
document how blacks lived and served alongside whites from the nation’s
birth. Black patriots fought at Lexington and Concord, Franklin pointed
out in “From Slavery to Freedom,” published in 1947. They crossed the
Delaware with Washington and explored with Lewis and Clark.
The book sold more than 3.5 million copies and remains required reading
in college classrooms. It was based on research Franklin conducted in
libraries and archives that didn’t allow him to eat lunch or use the
bathroom because he was black.
“He was working in a profession that more or less banned him
at the outset and ended up its leading practitioner,” said Tim Tyson, a
history professor at Duke. “And yet, he always managed to keep his grace
and his sense of humor.”
Late in life, Franklin received more than 130 honorary degrees and the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People’s Spingarn
Award. In 1993, President Bill Clinton honored Franklin with the Charles
Frankel Prize, recognizing scholarly contributions that give “eloquence
and meaning ... to our ideas, hopes and dreams as American citizens.”
Clinton awarded Franklin the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the
nation’s highest civilian prize, two years later, and gave him the role
for which he was perhaps best known outside academia, as chairman of
Clinton’s Initiative on Race. It was a job of which Franklin said, “I am
not sure this is an honor. It may be a burden.”
As he aged, Franklin spent more time in the greenhouse behind his home,
where he nursed orchids, than in libraries. He fell in love with the
flowers because “they’re full of challenges, mystery” — the same reasons
he fell in love with history.
In June, Franklin had a small role in the movie based on the book
“Blood Done Signed My Name,” about the public slaying of black man in
Oxford in 1970. Tyson, the book’s author, said at the time he wanted
Franklin in the movie “because of his dignity and his shining
intelligence.”
Franklin attended historically black Fisk University, where he met
Aurelia Whittington, who would be his wife, editor, helpmate and rock for
58 years, until her death in 1999. He planned to follow his father into
law, but the lively lectures of a white professor, Ted Currier, convinced
him history was his field. Currier borrowed $500 to send Franklin to
Harvard University for graduate studies.
Franklin’s doctoral thesis was on free blacks in antebellum North
Carolina. His wife spent part of their honeymoon in Washington, D.C., at
the Census Bureau, helping him finish. The resulting work, “The Free Negro
in North Carolina, 1790-1860,” earned Franklin his doctorate and, in 1943,
became his first published book. Four years later, he took a job at Howard
University. It was the same year “From Slavery to Freedom” was
published.
Some of his greatest moments of triumph were marred by bigotry.
His joy at being offered the chair of the Brooklyn College history
department in 1956 was tempered by his difficulty getting a loan to buy a
house in a “white” neighborhood.
When he was to receive the freedom medal, Franklin hosted a party for
some friends at Washington’s Cosmos Club, of which he had long been a
member. A white woman walked up to him, handed him a slip of paper and
demanded that he get her coat. He politely told the woman that any of the
uniformed attendants, “and they were all in uniform,” would be happy to
assist her.
Franklin was born Jan. 2, 1915, in the all-black town of Rentiesville,
where his parents moved in the mistaken belief that separation from whites
would mean a better life for their young family. But his father’s law
office was burned in the race riots in Tulsa, Okla., in 1921, along with
the rest of the black section of town.
His mother, Mollie, a teacher, began taking him to school with her when
he was 3. He could read and write by 5; by 6, he first became aware of the
“racial divide separating me from white America.”
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