Difference between revisions of "Vernon McDaniel"
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Dr. '''Vernon McDaniel''' (1907?-[[2000]]) was an African-American educator who was principal of [[Booker T. Washington High School]] from [[1934]] to [[1944]]. In [[1941]] he was the plaintiff in a federal [[NAACP]] lawsuit against the [[Escambia County School Board]] to mandate equal pay for black teachers. Realizing the court would decide for McDaniel, the school board agreed to a settlement that would equalize salaries over a three-year period. He was dismissed from his position three years later. | Dr. '''Vernon McDaniel''' (1907?-[[2000]]) was an African-American educator who was principal of [[Booker T. Washington High School]] from [[1934]] to [[1944]]. In [[1941]] he was the plaintiff in a federal [[NAACP]] lawsuit against the [[Escambia County School Board]] to mandate equal pay for black teachers. Realizing the court would decide for McDaniel, the school board agreed to a settlement that would equalize salaries over a three-year period. He was dismissed from his position three years later. | ||
Latest revision as of 18:24, 2 March 2011
Dr. Vernon McDaniel (1907?-2000) was an African-American educator who was principal of Booker T. Washington High School from 1934 to 1944. In 1941 he was the plaintiff in a federal NAACP lawsuit against the Escambia County School Board to mandate equal pay for black teachers. Realizing the court would decide for McDaniel, the school board agreed to a settlement that would equalize salaries over a three-year period. He was dismissed from his position three years later.
Vernon McDaniel | |
---|---|
Born | 1907? |
Died | November 2, 2000 Pensacola |
Occupation | Educator |
Spouse | Mildred McDaniel |
McDaniel later traveled and advised politicians (including President John F. Kennedy, whom he met with two days before his assassination) about desegregation and civil rights issues in education. He became a professor at Tuskegee University and in 1965 earned a doctorate in education from New York University. He then served as vice-president of Bishop College in Dallas from 1967-75.
McDaniel returned to Pensacola in 1975 and ran for the School Board, becoming the first African-American to be elected to the position and then its first African-American chairman.
The school district's Vernon McDaniel Building on Garden Street was named for him on October 5, 2000. He passed away less than a month later, on November 2, at age 93.