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Augustus Granville Dill : ウィキペディア英語版 | Augustus Granville Dill
Augustus Granville Dill was born on November 30, 1882, in Portsmouth, Ohio. His parents were John and Elizabeth Jackson. He received his BA from Atlanta University in 1906, received a second BA from Harvard in 1908, and received his MA in 1909 from Harvard. While in progress with his Masters at Harvard, he came under the mentorship of W. E. B. Du Bois. He was a member of the NAACP, and his resume is decorated with many different jobs from business manager of ''The Crisis'' and ''The Brownies' Book'', curator, to musician (pianist).The Brownies' Book was a children's book that helped African American children gain a better self-image. During his career in academia he made early and major contributions to race relations in labor. He was never married, and, in 1928, was arrested for homosexual activities. He died in 1956. ==Early Works== As a student of W. E. B. Du Bois, Granville was the joint editor of various scholarly pieces, including "The College-Bred American Negro" (1911), "The Common School and the Negro American" (1912), "The Negro American Artisan" (1912) and "Morals and Manners Among Negro Americans" (1914). "Morals and Manners Among Negro Americans" was a social study based on responses to surveys that were sent out to African-Americans across the country in 1913. It was a means to assess social progress. These works illustrate the racial inequalities present during the early 20th century, when Jim Crow laws were enforced in the United States.
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