John Hope Franklin, Scholar and Historian, Dies at
Age 94
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
http://www.duke.edu/johnhopefranklin/obituary.html
DURHAM, N.C. - John Hope Franklin, the scholar who helped create the field
of African-American history and
dominated it for nearly six decades, has died at the age of 94.
Franklin died of congestive heart failure at Duke Hospital this morning. He is
survived by his son, John
Whittington Franklin, daughter-in-law Karen Roberts Franklin, sister-in-law
Bertha W. Gibbs, cousin Grant
Franklin Sr., a host of nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great-nephews, other
family members, many
generations of students and friends. There will be a celebration of his life
and of his late wife Aurelia
Franklin at 11 a.m. June 11 in Duke Chapel in honor of their 69th wedding
anniversary.
"John Hope Franklin lived for nearly a century and helped define that
century," said Duke President
Richard H. Brodhead. "A towering historian, he led the recognition that
African-American history and American history are one. With his grasp of the
past, he spent a lifetime building a future of inclusiveness, fairness and
equality. Duke has lost a great citizen and a great friend."
Franklin, James B. Duke Professor Emeritus of History, was a scholar who
brought intellectual rigor as well an engaged passion to his work. He wrote
about history - one of his books is considered a core text on the
African-American experience, more than 60 years after its publication - and he
lived it. Franklin worked on
the Brown v. Board of Education (1954) case, joined protestors in a 1965 march
led by Martin Luther King,
Jr. in Montgomery, Ala. and headed President Clinton's 1997 national advisory
board on race.
He is perhaps best known to the public for his work on President Clinton's 1997
task force on race. But his
reputation as a scholar was made in 1947 with the publication of his book,
"From Slavery to Freedom: A
History of African-Americans," which is still considered the definitive
account of the black experience in America.
"My challenge was to weave into the fabric of American
history enough of the presence of blacks so that the
story of the United States could be told adequately and fairly," he said
when the 50th anniversary of the book
was celebrated in 1997. "That was terribly important."
In January 2005, he spoke at Duke at the celebration of his 90th birthday,
displaying the fire that motivated
him throughout his long life. While others at the event talked about the past
and reminisced about his
accomplishments, Franklin focused squarely on the future. He described the
event, held the same day as
President George W. Bush's second inauguration, as a
"counter-inaugural," and gave a talk in the form of a
letter to a fictional white man he called "Jonathan Doe."
He recounted some of the historical inequalities in the United States and
recalled some of his own experiences with racism. He said, for example, that
the evening before he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President
Bill Clinton, a woman at his club in Washington, D.C., asked him to get
her coat. Around the same time, a man at a hotel handed Franklin his car keys
and told him to get his car.
"I patiently explained to him that I was a guest in the hotel, as I
presumed he was, and I had no idea where
his automobile was. And, in any case, I was retired," Franklin said. Both
of these incidents occurred when he was in his 80s.
"What these experiences will do to me in the long run, I do not know.
My cardiologist says that they are not
good," he said, continuing with the letter.
"I very much doubt, Mr. Doe, that you have had such experiences. Your race
and your consequent position of power and privilege have doubtless immunized
you from the experiences that a black person confronts daily, regardless of his
age, education, position or station in life."
At the time From Slavery to Freedom was published, there were few scholars
working in African-American
history and the books that had been published were not highly regarded by
academics. To write it, he first had to give himself a course in
African-American history, then spend months struggling to complete the research
in segregated libraries and archives - including Duke's, where he could not use
the bathroom.
Franklin accumulated many honors during his long career, including the
Presidential Medal of Freedom,
the nation's highest civilian honor. He shared the John W. Kluge Award for
lifetime achievement in the
humanities and a similar honor from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
and the American
Philosophical Society, the nation's two oldest learned societies.
But he also was revered as a "moral leader" of the historical
profession for his engagement in the
pressing issues of the day, his unflagging advocacy of civil rights, and his
gracious and courtly demeanor.
Virtually all of the many articles written about "John
Hope," as he was called by friends and colleagues,
include the words "distinguished" or "elegant." His
devotion to his wife, Aurelia, who died in 1999, was
legendary, as was his love of orchids, which he raised in his Durham home. He
even had one named after him: Phalaenopsis John Hope Franklin.
Franklin recounted the events of his long life in his autobiography
"Mirror to America: The Autobiography of
John Hope Franklin," which was published in 2005. To read and hear an
interview with Franklin about his
book, go to http://www.dukenews.duke.edu/2005/11/jhf_qa.html.
The grandson of a slave, Franklin's work was informed by his
first-hand experience with injustices of racism
-- not just in Rentiesville, Okla., the small black community where he was born
on Jan. 2, 1915, but
throughout his life.
Named after John Hope, the former president of Atlanta University, Franklin was
the son of Buck Colbert
Franklin, one of the first black lawyers in the Oklahoma Indian territory, and
Mollie Parker Franklin,
a schoolteacher and community leader
The realities of racism hit Franklin at an early age. He has said he vividly
remembers the humiliating experience of being put off the train with his mother
because she refused to move to a segregated compartment for a six-mile trip to
the next town. He was 6. Later, although an academic star at Booker T.
Washington High School and valedictorian of his class, the state would not
allow him to study at the state university because he was black.
So instead of the University of Oklahoma, in 1931 Franklin enrolled at Fisk
University, a historically black college in Nashville, Tenn., intending to
study law.
However, a white history professor, Theodore Currier, caused him to change his
mind and he received his
bachelor's degree in history in 1935. Currier became a close friend and mentor
and when Franklin's money ran out, Currier loaned the young student $500 to
attend graduate school at Harvard University, where he
received his master's in 1936 and doctorate five years later.
He began his career as an instructor at Fisk in 1936 and taught at St.
Augustine's and North Carolina
College for Negroes (now North Carolina Central University), both historically
black colleges.
In 1945, Alfred A. Knopf approached him about writing a book on African-American
history - originally titled
From Slavery to Freedom: A History of American Negroes -- and he spent 13
months writing it.
Then in 1947, he took a post as professor at Howard University, where, in the
early 1950s, he traveled from
Washington to Thurgood Marshall's law office to help prepare the brief that led
to the historic Brown v.Board of Education decision.
In 1956 he became chairman of the all-white history department at Brooklyn
College. Despite his position,
he had to visit 35 real estate agents before he was able to buy a house for his
young family and no New
York bank would loan him the money.
Later, while at the University of Chicago, he accompanied the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. on the march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala. in 1965.
He spent 16 years at the University of Chicago, coming to Duke in 1982. He
retired from the history department in 1985, then spent seven years as
professor of legal history at the Duke Law School.
Franklin was a prolific writer, with books including The Emancipation
Proclamation, The Militant South, The
Free Negro in North Carolina, George Washington Williams: A Biography and A
Southern Odyssey: Travelers in the Antebellum North. He also has edited many
works, including a book about his father called My Life and an Era: The
Autobiography of Buck Colbert Franklin, with his son, John Whittington
Franklin. Franklin completed his autobiography in 2005, which was reviewed
favorably in many media outlets across the country.
He received more than 130 honorary degrees, and served as president of the Phi
Beta Kappa Society, the
American Studies Association, the Southern Historical Association, the
Organization of American Historians
and the American Historical Association.
Franklin's best-known accomplishment in his later years was in
1997, when he was appointed chairman of the advisory board for President
Clinton's One America: The President's Initiative on Race. The seven member
panel was charged with directing a national conversation on race relations.
When he was named to the post, Franklin remarked, "I am not sure this is
an honor. It may be a burden."
The panel did provoke criticism, both from conservatives who pressured the
panel to hear from opponents of racial preference and others who said it did
not make enough progress. Franklin himself acknowledged in an interview with
USA Today in 1997 that the group could not solve the nation's racial problems.
But Franklin said the effort was still worth it.
In 2007, he lent his formidable effort to the issue of reparations for African
Americans. Franklin returned to
Oklahoma to testify in a hearing urging Congress to pass legislation that would
clear the way for survivors
of the Tulsa Race Riots of 1921, one of the nation's worst race riots, to sue
for reparations.
At Duke, Franklin's legacy has been honored in many ways. In
2006 he delivered Duke's commencement address.
After celebrating his 90th birthday in January 2005, Duke held a
symposium celebrating the 10th anniversary
of the John Hope Franklin Collection of African & African American
Documentation in the Rare Book,
Manuscript, and Special Collections Library at Duke University. The event also
marked the publication of
his autobiography. A portrait of Franklin was hung in Perkins Library in 1997.
And, in 2001, Duke opened the John Hope Franklin Center for
Interdisciplinary and International Studies,
(jhfc.duke.edu) where scholars, artists and members of the community have the
opportunity to engage in public discourse on a variety of issues, including
race,social equity and globalization. At the heart of its
mission is the Franklin Humanities Institute, which sponsors public events and
hosts the Franklin Seminar,
a residential fellowship program for Duke faculty and graduate students.
For Franklin, who continued his scholarly work and public appearances full-bore
into his 90s, the work he
began in the 1940s still was not finished.
In a statement to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2002, Franklin
summed up his own career:
"More than 60 years ago, I began the task of trying to write a new kind of
Southern History. It would be broad
in its reach, tolerant in its judgments of Southerners, and comprehensive in
its inclusion of everyone who
lived in the region. ... the long, tragic history of the continuing black-white
conflict compelled me to focus on the struggle that has affected the lives
of the vast majority of people in the United States. ....Looking back, I can
plead guilty of having provided only a sketch of the work I laid out for
myself."
In lieu of flowers, the family has asked that contributions be made to the
Aurelia W. and John Hope
Franklin Endowed Scholarship Fund at Fisk University, c/o Office of
Institutional Advancement, 1000 17th
Street North, Nashville, TN 37208. For more information on John Hope
Franklin, please visit the
Franklin Center web site at duke.edu/johnhopefranklin.