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Professor
of History
Phone: 8-9587
Office: 216E College Hall
Teaching Schedule: T/R 10:30-12; T 1:30-4:30
Office Hours: TR 12:30-1:30 & by appt.
E-mail: mfberry@sas.upenn.edu
Mary Frances Berry has been the Geraldine
R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought
and Professor of History since 1987. She received
her Ph.D. in History from the University of
Michigan and JD degree from the University
of Michigan Law School. She taught the History
of American Law, and the History of Law and
Social Policy. She also advises students in
African American History.
History 168: U.S. Legal History to 1877
History 169: History of American Law Since
1877
Mary
Frances Berry
1938-
Nationality: American
Occupation: Civil rights/human rights activist,
Professor, Federal government official,
Lawyer/attorney
Narrative essay
Mary Frances Berry (born 1938) is a groundbreaking
African American woman. She was the first
black woman to head a major research university,
was appointed Assistant Secretary of Education
by President Jimmy Carter in 1977, and
became commissioner and vice chairman
of the United States Commission on Civil
Rights in 1980. She is a professor at
the University of Pennsylvania and remains
active in a variety of social and political
issues.
Born on February 17, 1938, in Nashville,
Tennessee, Mary Frances Berry is the second
of the three children of George and Frances
Berry. Because of economic hardship and
extenuating family circumstances, Mary Frances
and her older brother were placed in an
orphanage for a time. Throughout her early
life, Berry was subjected to poverty and
to the cruelty that accompanies racial prejudice.
However, she proved to be a determined and
resilient child with an innate intellectual
ability and curiosity.
Berry persevered in her studies in the segregated
schools of Nashville and eventually found
a mentor, Minerva Hawkins, one of the black
teachers at her high school. At the time,
Berry was in the tenth grade, bored with
school, and experiencing the usual uncertainties
that come with adolescence. Hawkins challenged
her to keep learning and growing so that
she could one day reach her full potential.
While Berry had someone with whom she could
discuss academic subjects and her plans
for the future, she also had the encouragement
and support of her mother, who was determined
to provide better opportunities for her
children. Berry recalled in Ms. that her
mother would say, "You, Mary Frances!
You're smart.... You can think, you can
do all the things I would have done if it
had been possible for me.... You have a
responsibility to use your mind, and to
go as far as it will take you." In
1956 Berry succeeded in making herself,
her mother, and her mentor proud by graduating
with honors from Pearl High School.
Philosophy, history, and chemistry were
Berry's main areas of interest as she began
college at Fisk University in Nashville.
She later transferred to Howard University
in Washington, D.C. After earning her bachelor
of arts degree in 1961, Berry began graduate
studies in the department of history at
Howard. As a grad student, she sharpened
her skills in historical methodology and
applied them in researching the black experience
and U.S. history. In addition to attending
classes and studying, she worked nights
in various hospital laboratories to help
defray college expenses.
Berry then decided to leave Howard University
and continue her graduate studies in history
at the University of Michigan. Her chosen
area of study was U.S. history with a concentration
in constitutional history. Because of her
outstanding academic record, Berry was awarded
the Civil War Roundtable Fellowship Award
in 1965. The next year, with a Ph.D. to
her credit, Berry accepted a position as
an assistant professor of history at Central
Michigan University. That same year, she
also began studies for a law degree at the
University of Michigan Law School. Berry
reminisced in Ms. that her mother had always
told her, "Be overeducated. If somebody
else has a master's degree, you get a Ph.D.
If somebody has that, then you get a law
degree too."
In 1970 she was awarded her J.D. degree
and accepted a full-time position as the
acting director of the Department of Afro-American
Studies at the University of Maryland. Educational
administration suited Berry, and she was
eventually named director of Afro-American
Studies at the university. This promotion
was followed by an appointment to the post
of interim chairperson of the Division of
Behavioral and Social Sciences. From 1974
to 1976 she served as provost for this division,
thus becoming the highest-ranking black
woman on the University of Maryland's College
Park campus.
When the Board of Regents at the University
of Colorado offered Berry the chancellorship
of the university's Boulder campus in 1976,
she accepted and became the first black
woman to head a major research university.
A year later, she took a leave of absence
from her duties at Boulder to accept newly
elected U.S. president Jimmy Carter's invitation
to serve in the Department of Health, Education
and Welfare (HEW). As the assistant secretary
for Education from 1977 to 1980, Berry again
broke new ground: she was the first African
American woman to serve as the chief educational
officer in the United States.
Appointed to U.S.
Commission on Civil Rights
In 1980 President Carter appointed Berry
to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights,
a bipartisan agency that monitors the enforcement
of civil rights laws. Along with Berry,
he appointed Blandina Cardenas Ramirez and
commissioned a massive affirmative action
study. In doing so, Carter planted "many
seeds ... that would later grow to entangle
the commission in turmoil under [President
Ronald] Reagan" theorized James Reston,
Jr., in Rolling Stone. When the affirmative
action study was published, it supported
setting goals and timetables for correcting
historic discrimination of blacks and women,
particularly in the workplace.
In his 1980 presidential campaign, Reagan
had spoken against affirmative action, and
the newly published study put him in an
uncomfortable position. According to Reston,
the Commission on Civil Rights was viewed
by Reagan and his staff as "a pocket
of renegades that needed to be cleaned out."
Reston continued: "Reagan wanted his
own people everywhere, and no agency--regardless
of ... its historic independence and bipartisanship--escaped
attention." In 1984, Reagan attempted
to fire Berry, a registered Independent,
along with Democrat Ramirez and another
Democratic commissioner.
In the Washington Post, Berry expressed
her frustration over Reagan's attempt to
remove members of the commission who disagreed
with his viewpoints. She felt that his actions
reduced the U.S. Civil Rights Commission
from "watchdog of civil rights"
to "a lapdog for the administration."
Berry and Ramirez successfully sued Reagan
in a federal court and retained their seats
on the commission. Berry became known as
"the woman the president could not
fire." Joan Barthel wrote in Ms. that
Berry's "convictions [kept] her clinging
stubbornly to her outcast's seat on the
commission." Berry responded: "I
tell [my friends] the happiest day of my
life was when Reagan fired me.... I was
fired because I did what I was supposed
to do. His firing me was like giving me
an A and saying `Go to the head of the class.'"
Scholarly Pursuits
Berry returned to Howard University as a
professor of history and law in 1980. By
1987, she had accepted the post of Geraldine
R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought
at the University of Pennsylvania. Throughout
the 1980s, she increased her involvement
in social activism and published two books,
Long Memory: The Black Experience in America
and Why ERA Failed: Politics, Women's Rights,
and the Amending Process of the Constitution.
Long Memory, co-authored by John Wesley
Blassingame, a professor of southern and
African American history at Yale, uses autobiographies,
poetry, and newspaper stories to document
the responses of people of color to oppression
and racism in the United States. The text
is designed to be used in survey courses
on the African American experience.
Why ERA Failed, published in 1986, suggests
that the controversial Equal Rights Amendment
failed because it lacked the broad consensus
it needed at both the national and the local
levels. Berry contends that ERA supporters
made a mistake by not building state-to-state
coalitions of support for the amendment.
In addition, she maintains that certain
U.S. Supreme Court actions--actions aimed
at removing common forms of discrimination
throughout the nation--actually worked against
the amendment's passage; according to Berry,
the American public became less inclined
to support the idea of a sweeping constitutional
amendment because judicial measures, no
matter how small, were already being taken
to curtail discriminatory practices.
Stepped
up Role in Global Activism
Academic analyses comprised only one part
of Berry's professional life. In 1984 she
wanted to raise the collective American
consciousness on apartheid in South Africa.
The issue of South Africa's government-imposed
policy of racial segregation was being discussed
by groups throughout the United States,
but little was actually being done to end
it. Berry felt that it was time to take
action. On Thanksgiving Eve of 1984, Berry,
TransAfrica head Randall Robinson, and Congressman
Walter Fauntroy visited the South African
embassy in Washington, D.C., and presented
a list of demands: they wanted longtime
political prisoner Nelson Mandela of the
African National Congress--as well as other
anti-apartheid leaders--set free, and they
wanted a new South African constitutional
conference planned. The three activists
vowed that they would wait while the ambassador
called Pretoria, the seat of the country's
government, with their demands.
Their actions had been carefully planned
for what is traditionally a slow news day.
As Berry told Ms., "If you're going
to help people in their struggle, you should
be smart for them.... If your demonstration
doesn't get media coverage, you might as
well not have it." The media was indeed
there to record Berry, Robinson, and Fauntroy
being handcuffed and led away in a paddy
wagon. The effect was just what the trio
had hoped for. Barthel recounted in Ms.:
"Here was not just another campus radical;
here was Dr. Mary Frances Berry, a member
of the Commission on Civil Rights, a professor
of history and law, a member of the bar,
a scholar with published books to her credit,
with more citations and honorary degrees
than her wall could hold. Here was a former
Assistant Secretary of Health, Education,
and Welfare, once a provost at the University
of Maryland, and chancellor at the University
of Colorado at Boulder."
Spearheaded Free South
Africa Movement
Berry, Robinson, and Fauntroy were arraigned
on Thanksgiving Day and released on their
own recognizance. At a press conference
the day after Thanksgiving, the trio introduced
their Free South Africa Movement (FSAM).
At 4:15 p.m. each day thereafter for a full
year, a picket line formed at the South
African embassy and ended with a press conference
that invariably appeared on the evening
news. Celebrities and activists such as
Paul Newman, Tony Randall, Gloria Steinem,
some of the Kennedys, and members of Congress
came by to lend support. Altogether Berry
was arrested five times, but she never gave
up hope. "Progressive politics is not
passe," she told Ms., "and there
are things we can do to make change, and
to lay the groundwork for change later on."
Over the next year, the Free South Africa
Movement spread throughout the country.
Colleges, universities, and cities were
divesting themselves of holdings in companies
that operated in South Africa. Eventually
Nelson Mandela was released from prison
in South Africa and economic sanctions were
imposed against the country. Early in 1992,
Berry, Robinson, and Fauntroy had reason
to rejoice when a referendum approved the
dismantlement of apartheid. "Now, we
want to see a day when the black violence
will end, and one man, one vote will come,"
stated Berry in the Washington Post. That
day came in the spring of 1994, when Mandela--once
a powerless prisoner of apartheid--became
the new president in his country's first
free and fair multiracial elections.
Tackled Child Care
Issues
Having made an impact on the international
front, Berry returned in the 1990s to domestic
issues--like employment, pay equity, and
the state of the American family. Family
issues and women's rights were the topics
of her 1993 book The Politics of Parenthood.
Historically, notes Berry, child care was
not the sole province of mothers. By the
mid-nineteenth century, however, the tradition
of the man as the breadwinner and the woman
as the homemaker was firmly entrenched in
American society. When women joined the
work force in droves during the 1970s, the
notion of women as primary care takers held
on. "Even among activists for parental
leave," wrote Berry, "the argument
is that the mother needs more help because
now women are out in the world. But the
evidence from psychologists is that children
can be cared for by anyone, so long as it's
good, consistent care."
Berry told Kenneth Walker in Emerge that
the central civil rights message of her
book is that until mothers are freed from
the primary responsibility of child rearing,
they cannot pursue their economic or other
destinies. In response to Walker's statement
that many people believe that the high crime
rate and increasing number of troubled children
is a result of the absence of a good mother,
Berry replied, "If my child is bad,
it's because our whole extended family network
is not working. To say my child is bad because
he doesn't have a good mother, I mean, it's
like an alien notion, because the mother
[alone] is just not responsible."
Reviewing Berry's book in the Christian
Science Monitor, Laura Van Tuyl stated,
"Berry presents a dispassionate history
of the women's movement, day care, and home
life, showing the persistent obstacles to
economic and political power that have confronted
women as a result of society's definition
of them as `mothers.' [She] ... attributes
the failure of the Equal Rights Amendment,
the languishing of the women's movement
in the `80s, and years of bickering over
federal parental-leave and child care bills
to an unwillingness to rethink gender roles."
Berry continues in her determined struggle
for racial, economic, and gender-based justice.
"Basically, I'm an optimist,"
she remarked in Ms. "I honestly believe--and
I'm sorry, I know this sounds boring--that
in the end, truth and justice will prevail....
My mother used to tell me, `Remember, sometimes
when it seems like you're losing, you're
winning. It all comes out in the wash.'"
Sources:
Books
-
Berry, Mary Frances, The Politics of Parenthood:
Child Care, Women's Rights, and the Myth
of the Good Mother, Viking, 1993.
- The
Pig Farmer's Daughter and Other Tales
of American Justice: Episodes of Racism
and Sexism in the Courts from 1865 to
the Present, Knopf, 1999.
Periodicals
-
Christian Science Monitor, May 13, 1993,
p. 13.
- Ebony,
January 1979, p. 80.
- Emerge,
June 1993, p. 58; September 1993, p. 6.
- Essence,
October 1984, p. 12.
- Jet,
March 20, 1989, p. 10; October 11, 1993,
p. 14.
- Los
Angeles Times, April 19, 1993, p. E-2.
- Ms.,
January 1987, p. 68; November/December
1990, p. 88.
- Nation,
May 23, 1987, p. 692.
- New
Republic, August 16, 1993, p. 30.
- New
York Times, February 10, 1993, p. A-19.
- New
York Times Book Review, October 19, 1986,
p. 7.
- New
York Times Magazine, September 13, 1987,
p. 93.
- Publishers
Weekly, January 11, 1993, p. 46.
- Rolling
Stone, March 13, 1986, p. 41.
- Society,
May/June 1988, p. 94.
- USA
Today, January 28, 1992, p. A-11; April
12, 1993, p. A-12.
- Washington
Monthly, December 1986, p. 58; October
1987, p. 46.
- Washington
Post, January 18, 1984; March 19, 1992,
p. 19.
Biography Resource Center
©2001, Gale Group, Inc.
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