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  1. historicsites.nc.gov › all-sites › charlotte-hawkins-brown-museumHistory | NC Historic Sites

    Charlotte Hawkins Brown: One Woman's Dream Winston-Salem, N.C.: Bandit Books, 1995 (A "creative biography") by Diane Silcox-Jarrett. Women Builders Washington, D.C.: Associated Publishers, 1931. (Profiles of prominent African American women, including Charlotte Hawkins Brown, Mary McLeod Bethune, and Nannie Helen Burroughs) by Sadie Iola Daniel.

  2. Charlotte Hawkins Brown was a woman with pride in herself and her people. She had a deep belief in the American principles of freedom and justice for all human beings and she expressed this commitment eloquently. She succeeded in showing for all the world to see "what a young black woman could do." Dr. Brown died in 1961.

  3. Charlotte Hawkins Brown Museum State Historic Site, Gibsonville, North Carolina. 2.6K likes · 2,190 were here. North Carolina’s first State Historic Site to honor an African American and a Woman.

  4. Charlotte Hawkins Brown is elected one of 150 delegates to represent the Council of Congregational Churches of America in Bournemouth, England. 1931. Elworth E. Smith graduates from PMI. Smith came to the school with only five dollars, but graduated from PMI with the highest honors.

  5. Charlotte Hawkins Brown was born in Henderson, North Carolina, but grew up in Massachusetts after her family moved from the South. She was educated in Boston and had planned to finish her college ...

  6. Brown, Charlotte Hawkins. June 11, 1883. January 10, 1961. One of the premier educators of her day, Charlotte Hawkins Brown was also a key figure in the network of southern African-American clubwomen who were active in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Brown was born Lottie Hawkins in Henderson, North Carolina.

  7. historicsites.nc.gov › all-sites › charlotte-hawkins-brown-museumCivic Life | NC Historic Sites

    The Civic Life of Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown. "I believe that the end of all education is to teach one to live completely." - Charlotte Hawkins Brown. Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown —the granddaughter of a slave— was born on June 11, 1883 in the rural community of Henderson, North Carolina. In 1888 Lottie, together with nineteen members of ...