From the February 2, 2020, Chicago Tribune by Ron Grossman.
She didn't write a book, but her name is on a special collection in the Carter G. Woodson Regional Library in Chicago. When she died in 1960, the Chicago Defender's obituary was headlined: "Historian Who Never Wrote."
Vivian Harsh once said: "If we as Negroes knew the full truth about what we, as a race, have endured and overcome just to stay alive with dignity, our respect and hunger for education would triple overnight."
Her devotion and dedication to all things history began back when she was at high school at Wendell Phillips in Chicago, where she joined the Herodotus History Club. The ancients called Herodotus the "Father of History."
Vivian Harsh was the "Mother of Black History."
After the George Cleveland Hall Branch of the Chicago Public Library opened on the South Side, with Harsh as the head librarian, the Rosenwald Fund gave her a $500 grant to study libraries serving black communities in other cities. Julius Rosenwald, a philanthropist and president of Sears, Roebuck & Co. was responsible for making the Hall Branch a reality in Chicago's Bronzeville neighborhood. Not to mention all the hundreds of Rosenwald schools built in the South to educate black children.
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