Ruth Braswell Jones (1914- )

August 01, 2008 
/ Contributed By: Alton Hornsby

Ruth Braswell Jones

Ruth Braswell Jones

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Educator Ruth Braswell Jones was born in Rocky Mount, North Carolina on November 21, 1914, the seventh daughter, of William and Arkaanna (Sanders) Braswell. Her education includes a diploma with distinction from Brick Junior College, Brick, North Carolina, in 1933 and a B.S. degree in Education with distinction from Elizabeth City State Teachers College, Elizabeth City, North Carolina, in 1948. North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro, North Carolina, awarded her the M.S. degree in Education in 1960.

Jones’ career as an elementary school teacher spanned forty-seven years, 1933 to 1980. She gave to the children she touched, support, encouragement and a challenge to reach their potential. Her professional accomplishments occurred over a period of time that embraced both the segregated and integrated life histories of the state professional education organizations in North Carolina. As a master teacher, her impact has been recognized by colleagues and associates at the local, district, and state levels. Among the awards received were: the Outstanding Service Award, given by the Rocky Mount Unit of the North Carolina Teachers Association-Association of Classroom Teachers, 1969; the prestigious Terry Sanford Award for Creativity in Teaching, presented by the North Carolina Association of Educators in 1972, and the Teaching Career and Service to Education Award, given by the Edgecomb County Unit of the North Carolina Association of Educators in 1980.

Paralleling the recognition bestowed upon Jones as an outstanding teacher was the acclaim she commanded in elective and appointive professional offices at state, regional and national levels.

These included: the first and only woman in North Carolina to have been elected president of two state education associations, the all-black North Carolina Teachers Association which existed prior to integration, and the North Carolina Association of Educators, the integrated association of educators that was organized after the separate black and white associations were dissolved; chairperson of the National Education Association’s Bylaws and Rules Committee; the first black woman from North Carolina to be elected to the National Education Association’s Board of Directors; the first black president of the Southeast Regional Association of Classroom Teachers, and member of the Political Action Steering Committee of the National Education Association.

The achievements that Jones garnered were not limited to professional involvement. She was widely recognized for her participation in the civic and religious activities in her community. These recognitions and their awards have included: Woman of the Year, Rocky Mount BPW League, Incorporated, 1969; Civic and Religious Worker and Exemplary Teacher, Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, 1972, and Citizen of the Year, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, 1974.

Author Profile

Alton Hornsby Jr. earned a Bachelors degree in history from Morehouse College and M.A. and Ph.D. degree from the University of Texas (Austin), where he held a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, a Southern Education Foundation Fellowship and a University Fellowship. Professor Hornsby is Fuller E. Callaway Professor of History at Morehouse College. For 25 years (between 1976 and 2001), he edited the Journal of Negro History for the Association for the Study of African American Life and History. He has also edited “The Papers of John and Lugenia Burns Hope” for Blackwell’s Companion to African American History and the Dictionary of Twentieth Century Black Leaders. In 2004, he wrote the Introduction for the 17th edition of Who’s Who Among African Americans. Among his most recent works are A Short History of Black Atlanta, 1847-1990, “Southerners Too?: Essays on the Black South, 1773-1990,” for the Dictionary of Twentieth Century Black Leaders (editor-in-chief and contributor), The Atlanta Urban League, 1920-2000 (with Alexa B. Henderson; winner of the Adele Mellon Prize for distinguished scholarship), A Biographical History of African Americans, and From the Grassroots: Profiles of Contemporary Black Leaders (with Angela M. Hornsby),

Hornsby has been president of the Association of Social and Behavioral Scientists and the Southern Conference on African American Studies. He has served on the executive council of the Association of Social and Behavioral Scientists, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) and the Southern Historical Association.

Dr. Alton Hornsby died in Atlanta, Georgia on September 1, 2017.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Hornsby, A. (2008, August 01). Ruth Braswell Jones (1914- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/jones-ruth-braswell-1914/

Source of the Author's Information:

Alton Hornsby, Jr. and Angela M. Hornsby-Gutting, From the Grassroots: Profiles of Contemporary African American Leaders (Montgomery: E-BookTime LLC, 2006).

Further Reading