Marion Thompson Wright
#99,922
Most Influential Person Across History
African American historian
Marion Thompson Wright's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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History
Marion Thompson Wright's Degrees
- PhD History Columbia University
Why Is Marion Thompson Wright Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Marion Thompson Wright was an African-American scholar and activist. In 1940, Wright became the first African-American woman in the United States to earn her Ph.D. in history. Early life Marion Manola Thompson Wright was born in East Orange, New Jersey, on September 12, 1902, to Minnie Thompson and Moses R. Thompson. Wright was the youngest of four children, and had two older twin sisters and a brother who died at a young age.
Marion Thompson Wright's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- New Jersey Leads in the Struggle for Educational Integration (1953) (17)
- New Jersey Laws and the Negro (1943) (11)
- I. A Dramatic Historical Event (1948) (8)
- Importance of the Study (1943) (6)
- Extending Civil Rights in New Jersey Through the Division Against Discrimination (1953) (5)
- Relation of Burning Injuries to Social Circumstances. (1945) (5)
- Racial Integration in the Public Schools in New Jersey (1954) (5)
- Negro Youth and the Federal Emergency Programs: CCC and NYA (1940) (3)
- Educational Programs for the Improvement of Race Relations: Negro Advancement Organizations (1944) (3)
- The Role of Educational Agencies in Maintaining Morale Among Negroes (1943) (2)
- The Story of an Ex-White Man@@@Kingsblood Royal (1947) (1)
- Anatomy of racial intolerance (1947) (1)
- Letting the Chips Fall Where They May@@@No Trumpet Before Him (1949) (1)
- Mr. Baxter's School (1941) (1)
- Harry S. Ashmore, The Negro and The SchoolsRobin M. Williams, Jr. and Margaret W. Ryan, The Schools in Transition (1955) (1)
- Social Factors in Aetiology of Burns (1944) (1)
- Conclusions (1943) (0)
- Negro Higher and Professional Education in Delaware (1948) (0)
- It Can Happen Anywhere@@@If He Hollers, Let Him Go (1946) (0)
- "Any Place But Here"@@@They Seek a City (1946) (0)
- Frank J. Klingberg, An Appraisal of the Negro in Colonial South Carolina (1942) (0)
- It Has Been Done@@@All Born Sailors (1946) (0)
- But the Twain Do Meet@@@Strange Fruit. (1944) (0)
- Reconstruction Days@@@The Vixens (1947) (0)
- II. The Early Years of the Republic (1948) (0)
- There Was Once a Negro Scientist@@@Your Most Humble Servant (1950) (0)
- Early History (1943) (0)
- Period of Democratic Idealism (1943) (0)
- An Educational "Job Analysis"@@@Needs of Negro High School Graduates (1946) (0)
- An Assessment of Negro Education@@@Negro Education in the United States. (1961) (0)
- IV. Intensified Battles for Emancipation and the Rights of Citizenship (1948) (0)
- Negro Secondary Schools@@@An Evaluation of the Accredited Secondary Schools for Negroes in the South. (1945) (0)
- Negroes as Citizens (1943) (0)
- People Are That Way@@@Without Magnolias (1949) (0)
- V. Summary (1948) (0)
- Are Colonials People?@@@Color and Democracy (1946) (0)
- And so it Came About in Greene County, Georgia@@@Tenants of the Almighty. (1944) (0)
- A Pioneer Chemurgist@@@Dr. George Washington Carver. (1945) (0)
- It's All Happened Before!@@@The Education of Negroes in New Jersey. (1942) (0)
- III. Transition Years, 1807-1844 (1948) (0)
- Juvenile Delinquency: Its Nature and Control.@@@Understanding Juvenile Delinquency. (1961) (0)
- A Period of Transition, 1804-1865 (1943) (0)
- Some Educational and Cultural Problems and Needs of Negro Children and Youth (1950) (0)
- Unintentional Integration@@@The Other Room (1948) (0)
- Laws Passed From 1675 to 1776 (1943) (0)
- Extending Civil Rights in New Jersey (1953) (0)
- Am I My Brother's Keeper?@@@The Negro and the Post-War World (1946) (0)
- Society at the Bar@@@Knock on Any Door (1948) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Marion Thompson Wright?
Marion Thompson Wright is affiliated with the following schools:
