Loading...
Skip To Main Content

Header Holder

Canvas Menus

District Canvas Menu

finder

school & Program

Site Info Canvas

spps

Get in Touch with

contact us

560 Rondo Avenue
St. Paul
MN
55103

Telephone

Get In Touch Navigation

Search Canvas

Horizontal Nav

Breadcrumb

Who Is Benjamin E. Mays?

 

Our school's namesake, Dr. Benjamin E. Mays, was a great speaker, writer, teacher, administrator, and  advisor to historical figures worldwide. In other words, Dr. Mays was a great leader and communicator. His  communication and leadership skills were assets that he utilized throughout his illustrious career.

 We believe that our students can also become great leaders and communicators. We believe that a student who can communicate effectively will be prepared to assume a leadership role with confidence, compassion, and integrity.

Benjamin E. Mays

Dr. Benjamin Elijah Mays was a giant in the Christian ministry and American education. He is remembered for his outstanding leadership and service as a teacher, preacher, mentor, scholar, author and activist in the civil rights movement.

Born August 1, 1894 near Epworth, South Carolina, he was a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Bates College in Maine. He served as pastor of Shiloh Baptist Church from 1921-1923 in Atlanta, Georgia. Recruited by Morehouse President John Hope, Mays would join the faculty as a mathematics teacher and debate coach. He obtained a master's degree in 1925 and in 1935 a Ph.D. degree from the University of Chicago. In 1934, he was appointed dean of the School of Religion at Howard University and served until 1940.

The Man

He became president of Morehouse College in 1940 and launched a 27-year tenure that shepherded the institution into international prominence. He upgraded the faculty, secured a Phi Beta Kappa chapter and sustained enrollment during wartime America. His most noted forum was Tuesday morning Chapel in historic Sale Hall, where he challenged and inspired the students to excellence in scholarship and in life itself. One of Morehouse's most distinguished graduates, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. '48, remembers Dr. Mays as his "spiritual mentor" and "intellectual father."

Upon his retirement, he served as president of the Atlanta Board of Education from 1970 to 1981.Throughout his educational career, he would receive 56 honorary degrees, including a posthumously awarded degree from Columbia University. He published nearly 2000 articles and nine books.

In 1926, he married Sadie Gray, a teacher and social worker, who died in 1969. Dr. Mays died in 1984.


The School Challenge

The world belongs to us,
And we will accept the challenge
To represent the global community in a caring way.

We are the ultimate students.
We renew our quest for excellence everyday
By being inquirers and critical thinkers.

We pledge to be open-minded, well-balanced,
And to live by high ideals and principles.

We strive to be responsible risk-takers
Who believe that “It is not a disgrace not to reach the stars,
But it is a disgrace to have no stars to reach for."

Knowledge will be our goal.
Reflection and communication will be our means
For making this world a better place.
We are the ultimate students.
The world belongs to us,
The future belongs to us and
Today begins with us!

The quote in italics is from our school’s namesake, Dr. Benjamin E. Mays.
The words in bold represent the Learner Profile of the International Baccalaureate Organization.