Sadie Gray Mays Explained

Sadie Gray Mays
Birth Name:Sadie M. Gray
Birth Date:August 5, 1900
Birth Place:Gray, Jones County, Georgia
Death Date:October 10 1969
Death Place:Atlanta, Georgia
Nationality:American
Occupation:social worker
Years Active:1930s-1960s
Known For:Sadie G. Mays Health and Rehabilitation Center in Atlanta

Sadie Gray Mays (August 5, 1900 – October 10, 1969) was an African-American social worker, trained at the University of Chicago. As the wife of Benjamin Mays, she was also a prominent Baptist minister's wife, a college president's wife (at Morehouse College, from 1940 to 1967), and a civil rights activist.

Early life

Sadie M. Gray was born in Gray, Georgia, the daughter of James Seaman Gray and Emma Frances Blount Gray.[1] Her father was a farmer who was born in slavery, understood to be the son of James Madison Gray, a prominent white landowner in Jones County, Georgia and the namesake of Gray, Georgia.[2] [3] She had four older brothers and four older sisters. Her brother Madison and her sister Emma became professors at Paine College in Augusta, Georgia; her brother Emory became a dentist.[4]

Sadie M. Gray attended Paine College, and earned a bachelor's degree (1924) and a master's degree (1931), both from the University of Chicago's Department of Social Service Administration.[5]

Career

In the 1920s she taught at South Carolina State College in Orangeburg. She later taught at the Atlanta University School of Social Work. She was a social worker for the Georgia Study of Negro Child Welfare in Atlanta, and for the National Urban League in Tampa, Florida.[6] In the 1930s, while her husband was a dean at Howard University, she was a social worker at the National Youth Administration. She also taught at Howard University and at Spelman College. She was a member of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and a life member of the NAACP.[7] [8] [9]

Sadie Gray Mays frequently lectured on social topics.[10] In 1943, she and her husband were speakers at the Institute on Socio-Religious Affairs, held in Augusta, Georgia. Her talk included a discussion of sexism and internalized misogyny: "Men ask women to do more work for less pay. Men see to it that women do not get jobs unless there is no man available or the work deals entirely with women. Women have been in this inferior position so long they tend to accept it. Some even have a technique of trying to make men feel superior. Many refuse to reach heights that they could because they fear men will not approve."

In 1947 she helped to establish and was first president of the Atlanta Association for Convalescent Aged Persons, a non-profit organization created to open Happy Haven, a nursing home for elderly black residents of the city.[11]

Personal life and legacy

Sadie M. Gray married Baptist minister and academic Benjamin E. Mays in 1926. He was president of Morehouse College from 1940 to 1967. She died in 1969, aged 69 years, in Atlanta. She lived at Happy Haven in her last months,[12] and the nursing home was renamed the Sadie G. Mays Memorial Nursing Home (now the Sadie G. Mays Health and Rehabilitation Center) in her memory.[13] The Mayses share a memorial on the campus of Morehouse College.[14] The Benjamin E. Mays Papers are archived at Howard University, and include much personal correspondence of Sadie Gray Mays.[15] In 2010, actress Veronica Byrd presented a program called "Sweet Sadie: The Life and Times of Sadie Gray Mays" in Atlanta for Black History Month.[16]

Notes and References

  1. Thomas Yenser, ed., Who's who in Colored America (Yenser 1942): 362.
  2. Barbara Dianne Savage, Your Spirits Walk Beside Us: The Politics of Black Religion (Harvard University Press 2008): 214-216.
  3. https://georgiahistory.com/ghmi_marker_updated/james-madison-grey/ James Madison Gray historical marker
  4. Benjamin E. Mays, Born to Rebel: An Autobiography (University of Georgia Press 2011): 30-32, 105, 114-115, 125-126.
  5. http://credo.library.umass.edu/view/full/mums312-i0117 Sadie Gray Mays, ca. 1931
  6. Henry Louis Gates Jr., Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, eds., African American Lives (Oxford University Press 2004): 572.
  7. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28874220/sadie_gray_mays_1970/ "New Portrait for Morehouse"
  8. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28874408/sadie_gray_mays_1969/ "Funeral Notices: Sadie Gray Mays"
  9. Kimberley Phillips Boehm, War! What Is It Good For?: Black Freedom Struggles and the U.S. Military from World War II to Iraq (University of North Carolina Press 2012): 236.
  10. https://books.google.com/books?id=TW2AIp2Ld1sC&dq=Sadie+Gray+Mays&pg=PA9 Dr. Benjamin E. Mays Speaks: Representative Speeches of a Great American Orator
  11. https://www.sgmays.org/about-us/our-unique-story/ Our Unique Story
  12. Randal Maurice Jelks, Benjamin Elijah Mays, Schoolmaster of the Movement: A Biography (University of North Carolina Press 2012): 238.
  13. Roz Edward, "Sadie G. May Center Celebrates 70 Years" Atlanta Daily World (May 28, 2017).
  14. https://www.morehouse.edu/mlkchapel/about-us/chapel-treasures.html Benjamin E. Mays and Sadie Gray Mays Memorial
  15. JoEllen ElBashir, curator, Benjamin Mays Papers finding aid, Howard University Library Manuscript Division.
  16. Shelia M. Poole, "Black History Event Honors Sadie G. Mays" The Atlanta Constitution (February 18, 2010): B3. via Newspapers.com