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John Hope Franklin: The Passing of a Giant

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The senior historian and sage John Hope Franklin passed away today. I’m between classes now but I had to make a few brief observations about the size of the void he leaves behind. Dr. Franklin was part of that generation who understood scholarship as a form of activism, a small, desperately outnumbered band who set out to assault the edifice of false knowledge that upheld inequality. His life literally connects the dark onset of Jim Crow to the election of Barack Obama. There are literally dozens of things that could be said about his contributions but consider this one: it was his historical research that Thurgood Marshall relied upon in writing his arguments for the Brown v. Board of Education case.

When asked how he felt about the election of an African American president last year, Dr. Franklin remarked that his mother raised him to believe that he would, in fact, be the first African American president. And perhaps by some measure he was.

He did not take an oath of office or reside in the White House, but his body of work was an extended State of the Union address and he upheld the Constitution. He was certainly a singular leader and a man whose work laid the groundwork for all of us — historians and civilians alike — to stand on equal footing in this world.

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4 Responses Subscribe to comments


  1. Anthony P. Johnson

    Truly, one of the Great Philosophers! John Hope Franklin, Aristotle, and Goethe will always be the standard of Greatness.

    Mar 25, 2009 @ 8:41 pm


  2. Marcus Reeves

    Amen, J!

    Mar 25, 2009 @ 10:01 pm


  3. L ois Scozzari

    John Hope Franklin has been a tremendous influence on my understanding of history and teaching

    Mar 26, 2009 @ 1:19 am


  4. kgc

    Wow. He will be greatly missed. I hope his life and legacy inspires a new generation of African American historians to enter the field.

    And to think, I just randomly mentioned him in a comment here a couple of posts ago.

    I own nearly all of his writings, and I met him, and his son, while working for the National Archives.

    Yesterday was a sad day.

    Mar 26, 2009 @ 2:54 pm