Merze Tate
was a professor, scholar, author and diplomacy expert who achieved a
series of notable firsts in her lifetime. Tate is the first
African-American to graduate from what is now known as Western Michigan
University, and the first African-American woman to attend the
University of Oxford.
Born
February 6, 1905, in Blanchard, Michigan, Tate excelled as a student,
although schools were inadequate for Black students during her
youth. Tate entered Western Michigan Teachers College to join the
profession in her home state. Racist hiring practices prevented her from
being hired in Michigan, so she took a job as a teacher in Indiana.
Not
much is known about this period of Tate's life, but she became known
for exposing her students to the value of travel via a club she began
during her early teaching days. This zeal for globe-trotting would
become a hallmark of Tate's further education and career.
Tate
attended Oxford in 1932 studying European diplomatic history, advanced
economics and international law, among other subjects. In 1935, she
earned a Bachelor of Literature degree from the institution, becoming
the first Black American to receive the degree. Tate also studied at the
University of Berlin while in Europe. She returned to the States to
teach history at Barber-Scotia College in Concord, N.C.
Tate's
impressive achievements didn't stop there. She become the first
African-American woman to earn a PH.D. in government and international
relations from Harvard University (then Radcliffe College).
As
an author, Tate published seven books, which focused on the United
States and the practice of disarmament or demilitarization. Because of
Tate's global influence and her role as a reporter, she was accused of
being a spy, although those allegations were never confirmed.
Tate
taught at Maryland's Morgan State College (now Morgan State University)
and was the Dean of Women at the school. She later became one of the
first two women to join the faculty of Howard University's Department of
History and worked there until her retirement in 1977.
Tate, who never married or had children, died at the age of 91 in 1996.
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