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Indiana University Press

Edwin Rogers Embree: The Julius Rosenwald Fund, Foundation Philanthropy, and American Race Relations

Edwin Rogers Embree: The Julius Rosenwald Fund, Foundation Philanthropy, and American Race Relations

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One of the most influential philanthropists of the early 20th century, Edwin Rogers Embree was the scion of generations of abolitionists and integrationists. He ably served the Rockefeller Foundation and when Julius Rosenwald created a foundation for his philanthropic activity, he called on Embree to be its head. The Rosenwald Fund is best known for constructing more than 5,300 schools for rural black communities in the South. In the 1940s, Embree became more personally engaged with race relations in the U.S. He chaired Chicago's Commission on Race Relations, helped create Roosevelt College, and was co-founder of the American Council on Race Relations. Late in life, Embree was president of the Liberian Foundation, devoted to improving health and education in Africa's oldest republic.



Author: Alfred Perkins
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Published: 03/18/2011
Pages: 384
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.44lbs
Size: 9.26h x 6.40w x 1.15d
ISBN: 9780253356048

About the Author

Alfred Perkins served as chief academic officer and taught history at institutions in New Jersey, Tennessee, and Kentucky. His most recent publications have appeared in Catholic Historical Review, Appalachian Heritage, Journal of Negro Education, and Rockefeller Archive Center Research Reports.

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