Complicated relationships: Mary Church Terrell's legacy for 21st Century activists
12018-09-28T20:59:28+00:00Cecilia Robinsondbf5499cc5366ba7dd1ab7a6e5a00d835a94ee7d11Poster of a 2016 symposium held at Oberlin College2018-09-28T20:59:28+00:002016Images provided by the Oberlin College Archives may be downloaded for educational use only by Oberlin College and the Oberlin School District. For all other uses--including reproduction in any media--permission must be requested from the Oberlin College Archives. Please see http://www.oberlin.edu/archive/using/services/application.htmlOberlin College. ArchivesposterCecilia Robinsondbf5499cc5366ba7dd1ab7a6e5a00d835a94ee7d
Several of the students who participated in the archival research and writing about Terrell presented their work at a meeting of the Society of American Archivists in Cleveland in August 2015, and at the symposium "Complicated Relationships: Mary Church Terrell's Legacy for 21st Century Activists" at Oberlin College in February 26-27, 2016. The title reflects the sometimes contentious nature of the bond between Terrell and her alma mater. The event celebrated a gift of some of Mary Church Terrell's papers and artifacts to the Oberlin College Archives by Ray and Jean Langston, descendants of Terrell.
The program for the symposium included talks by scholars from around the country, including many Oberlin alumnae. The keynote address was delivered by Johnnetta Betsch Cole, OC '57, former President of Spelman College and then director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art.
At the closing of the event, a commemorative plaque dedicated by the National Association of University Women (NAUW) was placed in the lobby of the Africana Studies Department in Rice Hall. Terrell founded the College Alumnae Club which was the forerunner of the NAUW.