John Hope Franklin, a towering scholar and pioneer of African-American studies who wrote the seminal text on the Black experience in the U.S. and worked on the landmark Supreme Court case that outlawed public school segregation, died Wednesday. He was 94.
David Jarmul, a spokesman at Duke University, where Franklin taught for a decade and was professor emeritus of history, said he died of congestive heart failure at the schoolās hospital in Durham.
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 āseparate but equalā in the nationās public schools.
Franklin was born Jan. 2, 1915, in the all-Black town of Rentiesville, Okla., where his parents moved in the mistaken belief that separation from whites would mean a better life for their young family. But his fatherās 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 āracial divide separating me from white America.ā
Franklin, his mother and sister Anne were ejected from a train when his mother refused the conductorās orders to move to the overcrowded āNegroā coach. As they trudged through the woods back to Rentiesville, young John began to cry.
His mother pulled him aside and told him, āThere was not a white person on that train or anywhere else who was any better than I was. She admonished me not to waste my energy by fretting but to save it in order to prove that I was as good as any of them.ā