Advancement Through Service: A History of the Frontiers International
By (Author) Frederick Johnson
By (author) Leonard Bethel
University Press of America
University Press of America
18th July 2012
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
369.5
Paperback
156
Width 152mm, Height 225mm, Spine 12mm
240g
Creativity, resourcefulness and a strong vision of equality in America helped Black men and women to establish their own organizations despite the continuing legacy and stigma of the slavery period. Frontiers International, the oldest Black community service organization in the U.S., was born in the heart of the Depression and called together Black men concerned about the condition of Blacks in America. Despite racial and religious turbulence during the 1930's, the Frontiers managed to maintain a posture of service to the deprived and needy in the minority community. Advancement Through Service constitutes the first history of this public service effort on the part of Blacks in the U.S. Contents: Nimrod B. Allen; Harold L. Pilgrim; Years of Growth; The Constitution and By-Laws; Frontiers and Vitiligo; Women's Auxiliary: The Yokettes; A Fish in the Sea; Africa and America; Service: A Community Challenge.
Dr. Leonard L. Bethelis professor Emeritus of African Studies at Rutgers University. A Yokefellow of the Plainfield Area Club, Dr. Bethel is a recipient of the Warren I Susman Teaching Award for Excellence and is a Fellow of the Oxford Roundtable at Oxford University.
Frederick A. Johnsonserved as Chairman of the Historical Committee of Frontiers International and was an editor of the Frontrunner newsletter. He was a Charter Yokefellow and a Past President of the Plainfield Area Club.