Carter G. Woodson
ILLUSTRATED BY
MARTIN RHODES/TIMES-DISPATCH
BY LORRAINE BLACKWELL
TIMES-DISPATCH WRITER
Republished from 1997 profiles
Carter G. Woodson dedicated his life to researching and preserving the saga of the African-American experience. He became known as ‘'the father of black history.‘’
Woodson—born Dec. 19, 1875, in Buckingham County—is best known for establishing Negro History Week in 1926. The celebration of the achievements of African-Americans later became Black History Month.
Woodson was the son of former slaves. His parents, James Henry Woodson and Eliza Riddle Woodson, had nine children. Woodson, the youngest, had to work on the family farm and couldn’t attend school regularly. continued below
Published: February 10, 2009
Updated: February 13, 2009
Determined to secure an education, he learned on his own.
At 17, Woodson moved to Huntington, W.Va., where he hoped to continue his education. He worked in the coal mines to support himself. In 1895, when he was 19, Woodson was able to enroll in Douglass High School in Huntington. He earned his diploma in less than two years. In 1901, he began teaching at his former high school, and for a short time served as principal. He also enrolled at Berea College, which he attended off and on, graduating in 1903.
| The Times of Carter Woodson
1875 1876 1906 1908 1915 1944 1945 1950 |
Woodson's thirst for knowledge was boundless. While he taught in the Philippines from 1903 to 1907, he took correspondence courses from the University of Chicago. After leaving the Philippines he traveled to Europe and Asia and briefly studied at the Sorbonne in Paris.
When he returned to the United States, Woodson enrolled at the University of Chicago and received both his bachelor's and master's degree in history and romance languages in 1908.
His studies there piqued his interest in history, and Woodson was accepted to the doctoral program at Harvard University. He received his doctorate in 1912. He was was the second black to receive a doctorate from the university.
He worked as a teacher at Dunbar High School in Washington from 1909 to 1919. Convinced that the history of African-Americans was being ignored and misrepresented, he took steps to put things right.
In 1915 Woodson founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, now the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History Inc. The association was created to promote and preserve African-American history and culture.
He founded the Journal of Negro History in 1916.
In 1917, he wrote his first book, ''The Education of the Negro Prior to 1861,'' considered one of his most important works.
![]() The Place of Carter G. Woodson in Historiography Working with Carter G. Woodson, the Father of Black History: A Diary, 1928-1930 Carter G. Woodson: A Bio-Bibliography |
In 1921, five years before he would establish Negro History Week, Woodson founded Associated Publishers to publish books and information about black life and history. He wrote or co-wrote 22 books, among them ''The Negro In Our History'' and ''The Miseducation of the Negro.''
Woodson also taught at Howard University and Virginia State College.
He founded the the Negro History Bulletin in 1937.
He spent his life investigating, documenting and publishing African-American history. Woodson was obsessed with his work and was described as a workoholic who was arrogant, cantankerous and domineering.
He died of a heart attack in 1950, before realizing his ambition of publishing the Encyclopedia Africana.
SOURCES: Encyclopedia of African American Culture and History; The African American Encyclopedia; the Association for the Study of Afto-American Life and History Inc.
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