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Mordecai Johnson, President of Howard University, retires after a successful presidency.
1956 (Jun 30)
Mordecai Johnson retired as president of Howard University. Johnson was born in Paris, Tennessee, in 1890. He was educated at Morehouse College, the University of Chicago, the Rochester Theological Seminary, and Harvard University. Upon receipt of a Master of Sacred Theology degree from Harvard in 1923, Johnson attracted national attention for a speech titled The Faith of the American Negro. After teaching at Morehouse and Howard, he took his post as the first Black president of Howard. When Johnson assumed the presidency, in 1926, Howard consisted of a cluster of unaccredited departments, a situation that Johnson sought to improve. In 1928, Johnson secured a congressional allocation of annual appropriations for the support and development of Howard University. When Johnson retired, Howard had ten schools and colleges, was a fully accredited institution, had an enrollment of more than six thousand students, and its School of Medicine was producing about half of the Black doctors in the United States. Johnson was succeeded by law professor and civil rights attorney James M. Nabrit,
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.