Day, Caroline Bond
Caroline Stewart Bond Day (CBD) was born on November 18, 1889, in Montgomery, Alabama, to Georgia and Moses Stewart. The Stewart family lived in Boston for several years. After CBD's father's death, her mother moved the family to Tuskegee, Alabama; there Georgia Stewart taught school and married John Percy Bond, a life insurance company executive. CBD adopted her stepfather's last name. Georgia and John Bond had two children together, a daughter, Wenonah Bond Logan, and a son, Jack Bond.
CBD was introduced to the field of anthropology in a class at Radcliffe taught by Earnest A. Hooton. During her senior year, she began collecting the physiological and sociological information on 'mixed' families which would lead to her publication A Study of Some Negro-White Families in the United States (1932). In her Radcliffe yearbook and alumna record, CBD listed social service work, not anthropology, as her ultimate career goal.
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2020-05-07 02:05:29 pm |
Betts Coup |
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User published constellation |
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2020-05-04 08:05:56 am |
Kim Allegretto |
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Republish: User canceled edit without making changes |
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2016-08-12 06:08:05 am |
System Service |
published |
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2016-08-12 06:08:02 am |
System Service |
ingest cpf |
Initial ingest from EAC-CPF |
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