Ira De Augustine Reid

Ira De Augustine Reid (July 2, 1901 – August 15, 1968[1]) was a prominent sociologist and author who wrote extensively on the lives of black immigrants and communities in the United States. He was also influential in the field of educational sociology. He held faculty appointments at Atlanta University, New York University, and Haverford College,[2] one of very few African American faculty members in the United States at white institutions during the era of “separate but equal.”

Biography

Personal life

Reid was born in Clifton Forge, Virginia, the son of a Baptist minister, but grew up in Harrisburg and Germantown, Pennsylvania.[1][2] He attended integrated public schools.

While at the University of Pittsburgh, Reid met and wed Gladys Russell Scott, with whom he adopted a child.[1] In 1950, Reid and his wife joined the Society of Friends, in which Reid was very active with educational works.[1] Gladys Russell Scott died in 1956 and Reid remarried, to Anna “Anne” Margaret Cooke in 1958.[1]

Reid died in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania on August 15, 1968.

Education

Reid attended Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, where he was recruited directly by President John Hope, receiving his Bachelor of Arts in 1922.[1] He then graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in 1925 with a Master of Arts in Social Economics. In 1939 he attained a PhD in Sociology from Columbia University.[2]

Career

Upon graduation from Morehouse College, Reid taught sociology and history at Texas College, followed by a year of teaching social science at Douglas High School in Huntington, West Virginia.[1]

From 1924 to 1928, Reid worked for the New York branch of the National Urban League, where he began as an apprentice and then fellow, before serving as an industrial secretary alongside Charles S. Johnson. Johnson and Reid collected data for the 1928 National Interracial Conference, held in Washington, DC. Reid then succeeded Johnson as the director of research and as editor of the Urban League's publication, Opportunity.[1][2]

Reid was appointed to a professorship of sociology at Atlanta University in 1934, hired by department chair W.E.B. Du Bois.[1] During his time there, Reid was the founding director of the People's College (1942), an adult education program. From years 1944-1946 he served as chair of the Sociology department and editor (1944-1948) of the journal Phylon: The Atlanta University Review of Race and Culture. Reid then spent one year as a visiting professor of educational psychology in New York University's School of Education, becoming the first black full-time faculty member at a white northern university during the time of “separate but equal.”[1][2]

Through the support of the American Friends Service Committee in 1947, Reid joined the faculty at Haverford College, where he was the college's first black professor.[3] He became the chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology in 1948, where he remained until retirement in 1966. During these years, he held visiting appointments at several universities, and served as a consultant and board member for sociological and educational initiatives and organizations, including the Pennsylvania Governor’s Commission on Higher Education.[1][2] From 1947 to 1950, Reid was the assistant editor of American Sociological Review and an officer of the Eastern Sociological Society and American Sociological Association.

McCarthy Era controversy

The United States Department of State suspended Reid's passport from 1952 to 1954 for suspicion of “communist sympathies,” based upon the scholarship that had gained him renown. Reid protested the allegations, and succeeded in securing the return of his passport.[1]

Legacy

Haverford College's Black Cultural Center is named for Reid and was rededicated in February 2013.[4] The New York Public Library's Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division maintains a collection of Reid’s unpublished writings and correspondence.[2]

Scholarship

Thought

During his time at the Urban League, Reid produced a number of studies conducted with African American communities around the United States, particularly in Harlem, in addition to a wider variety of sociological studies.[2]

Reid produced extensive scholarship on a variety of subjects, but is particularly renowned for his work with West Indian immigrants, as well as on youth and the sociology of education.[2] Swedish historian Gunnar Myrdahl drew from Reid's pioneering Urban League studies of African American urban life for his own work, An American Dilemma.[3]

After the 1954 Supreme Court Decision in Brown v. Board of Education, Reid edited a special issue of the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (March 1956), themed "Racial Desegregation and Integration."[1]

In an April 18, 2016 op-ed in The Baltimore Sun, Haverford College alumnus and former United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Stephen H. Sachs writes of Reid as a professor:

"Ira Reid's sociology course was by far the most stimulating of the year. Part provocative lecturer, part maestro of the Socratic method, he introduced us to the irreconcilable worlds of heredity and environment. He confronted us with the iconic works of the anthropologist Margaret Mead, and he challenged us to write an essay on the subject of 'blood will tell.'"[3]

Selected Publications

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Gates, Henry Louis, Jr.; Higginbotham, Evelyn Brooks (2004). African American Lives. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195160246.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Ira De Augustine Reid papers". New York Public Library. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 Sachs, Stephen H. (18 April 2016). "Learning to 'see beyond race'". The Baltimore Sun.
  4. "Ira De A. Reid House Rededicated". Haverford College. 13 February 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2016.

Further reading

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