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  1. Horace Mann Bond (November 8, 1904 – December 21, 1972) was an American historian, college administrator, social science researcher and the father of civil-rights leader Julian Bond. He earned graduate and doctoral degrees from University of Chicago at a time when only a small percentage of any young adults attended any college.

  2. Jun 1, 2007 · Father of civil rights activist and Georgia politician Julian Bond, Horace Mann Bond had a long and distinguished career as a historian, college administrator, and social science researcher, while making his own contributions to the Black freedom struggle of the 1950s and 1960s.

  3. Horace Mann Bond served as Lincoln Universitys first Black president and first alumnus president from the years 1945 through 1957. Horace Mann Bond (1904 – 1972) was an important figure in Pan-African and African American education during the 1930s through the 1950s.

  4. May 29, 2018 · Horace Mann Bond (1904-1972) was an important figure in African American education during the 1930s and 1940s working to end segregation while still improving the education of African American students.

  5. Feb 2, 2022 · Today, our featured Black Educator is Horace Mann Bond. Horace Mann Bond was born on November 8, 1904 in Nashville, Tennessee. Bond was the son of college educated parents; his mother was a schoolteacher.

  6. Horace Mann Bond is probably best known as an administrator of historically Afro-American colleges and universities, for his work with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in the Brown v. Board of Education, Topeka, case, and as the father of civil rights activist Horace Julian Bond.

  7. Horace Mann Bond was a black scholar who published several articles and essays on mental testing during his lengthy academic career. This essay looks at Bond's early, and later, published work on testing, much of which was bitterly critical of the racism he saw in the views of white advocates of IQ and other mental tests.