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Mary Mims was born in Minden, Louisiana. She was a community organizer, teacher, educator, humanitarian, lecturer, and a sociologist. She was the founder of the "community organization movement" in cooperative extension. She was an extension services specialist in community organizing and worked for Louisiana State University. She was a state community worker for Louisiana.[1]
Mary Mims | |
---|---|
Born | Minden, Louisiana, U.S. | August 30, 1882
Died | November 24, 1967 | (aged 85)
Occupation(s) | Educator, sociologist, agriculture sociologist extension agent |
Early life
editIt is stated that Mary started teaching at the age of seven after she learned to read. She gathered it is said seven Negro children together, and starting teaching them how to read. Her father ordered seven readers for the seven children.[2] She attended Mims Community School, and afterwards went to Louisiana Industrial Institute (La Tech) at Ruston, Louisiana in 1897 receiving a Bachelor of Industry Degree. She went on to attend Sophie B. Wright's School for Girls in New Orleans.
Career
editMary Mims' teaching career started in Bienville Parish. She went on to become Louisiana's first female principal. She later became the first parish superintendent of education.
Mims is known as an advocate for community development. She is the co-author of the book "The Awakening Community", along with Georgia Williams Mortiz. She viewed communities as "seedbeds of democracy", and communities as a vital part of a government.[3] Mims was a well known national orator during her time. She spoke alongside of president Calvin Coolidge as a guest speaker. She spoke at conferences nationally and internationally; and alongside of national leaders in the United States and with nobility in Europe and other parts of the world.[4][5] Mims started her career as teacher in Bienville Parish, Louisiana. She was the state's first female principal. She later became parish superintendent of education. In 1925 she was recruited to work for the Louisiana State University Agricultural Extension. The work that she did the LSU extension became a model for the United States in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. She was Louisiana's first extension sociologist. As an extension agent her tasks were to promote, economic, intellectual, civic, health, and recreational life programs to communities. She was a part of the early decades of educational organizing. Mims assisted agents in organizing communities in the state of Louisiana. As a specialist she help in the organizing of public work initiatives in the 1920s and 1930s.
Mims developed the "community organizing method" in the cooperative extension service in the 1920s. Her work extended across the South to over 1000 poor black and white communities through the 1930s.
Mary Mims worked with Essae Martha Culver to establish and promote library services in the Louisiana parishes.[6][7]
She traveled to Denmark to study community building work and their folk schools. Folk high school are also known as adult or Popular education. In the 19th century N. F. S. Grundtvig pioneered the folk schools. What Mims learned in Denmark, she brought back to the United States.[2][4] The folk schools were schools for lifelong learning. They gave the peasantry and those from the lower echelons of society opportunities for higher levels of learning. She initiated Folk School Weeks in Rayville, Louisiana and Abbeville, Louisiana. Mims is the founder of the Parish Folk School in Louisiana as training for community education.[8]
In 1932, Mims along with Georgia Williams Moritz published the book "The Awakening Community." The book advocates for the development of strong communities. It became a model for community building and development. In the book community building and cooperative participation are seen as the chief duty of citizenship in a democratic society.[9][10]
Camp Mary Mims a 4-H Club was named to honor Dr. Mary Mims.
In 1952, Mims retired.
References
edit- ^ Mims, Mary; Moritz (Williams), Georgia (1932). The Awakening Community. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. xxvii.
- ^ a b "The Extraordinary Mary Mims". www.lsuagcenter.com. 12 October 2015.
- ^ B, L. M. (1 May 1935). "The Awakening Community. By Mary Mims and Georgia Williams Moritz. New York: Macmillan, 1932. 273 pp. $2.00". Social Forces. 13 (4): 623. doi:10.2307/2569880. JSTOR 2569880.
- ^ a b Peters, Scott J. (1 June 2002). "Rousing the People on the Land: The Roots of the Educational Organizing Tradition in Extension Work". Journal of Extension. 40 (3).
- ^ Jumonville, Florence M. (14 March 2019). Louisiana History: An Annotated Bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-28240-9 – via Google Books.
- ^ Florence M. Jumonville (Spring 2004). "The Role of the State in the Organization of Statewide Library Service: Essae M. Culver, Louisiana's First State Librarian" (PDF). Library Trends. pp. 853–876. S2CID 13517939. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-07-09 – via University of Illinois.
- ^ "Winn's First Library, Winn Parish, LA". USGenWeb Archives.[unreliable source?]
- ^ Mims, Mary; Moritz (Williams), Georgia (1932). Dr. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. xi.
- ^ "Mary Mims and the Radical Side of Agrculture [sic] Extension Services | Makers All". Archived from the original on 2019-01-25. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
- ^ Mims, Mary; Moritz (Williams), Georgia (1932). The Awakening Community. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. xi.