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Mary
McLeod Bethune Historic Site Washington DC
Location: 1318 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC
The Mary McLeod Bethune Council House National Historic
Site commemorates the life of Mary McLeod Bethune and the organization she founded,
the National Council of Negro Women. The Bethune Council House was Mary McLeod Bethune's
last official Washington, DC
residence and the first headquarters of the National
Council of Negro Women. Mary McLeod Bethune founded Bethune-Cookman College in Daytona
Beach, Florida and served as an advisor on African American affairs to four presidents.
She was appointed Director of the Division of Negro Affairs of the National Youth
Administration by President Roosevelt.
She was the first African American woman to hold so high
an office in the federal government. The site features the three story Victorian
town house which was her home when she was in Washington, DC and housed the offices
of the National Council of Negro Women and a carriage house in which the National
Archives for Black Women's History is located.
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