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Black History You May Not Know: Melvin B. Tolson, The Great Debater

Like many of you, I saw the movie the Great Debaters when it was in theaters a few years ago. I knew that the movie was inspired by a true story, but I must confess that I didn’t learn until today, the beginning of Black History Month, about much of the story’s texture and what in it was true.

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I’ve been thinking about that story since I’ve written lately about debate—including one story about Wiley College, the setting for the movie and the real-life story.

Melvin B. Tolson

The professor and debate coach portrayed

by Denzel Washington, Melvin B. Tolson, was much more than what could be limited to an on-screen portrayal. Under his direction, the Wiley debate team, which he started, maintained a winning streak for 10 years.

Tolson was a noted and published poet who was appointed poet laureate of Liberia in 1947. The Poetry Foundation website says this about Tolson:

Appointed poet laureate of Liberia in 1947, Tolson attracted increased attention with his Libretto for the Republic of Liberia, an epic poem commemorating the African nation’s centennial. Observed poet and critic John Ciardi in Nation,

Tolson creates “a vision of Africa past, present, and future” with abundant imagery and “prodigious eclecticism.” Portraying Liberia as an offshoot of America, newer and smaller with hopes of achieving more, Tolson continues the allusiveness and vision displayed in his earlier work. Ciardi commended the poet’s “force of language and . . . rhythm,” concluding that Tolson “has established a new dimension for American Negro poetry.” Gibson described the Libretto as “pyrotechnic,” and credited Tolson with creating “a system of tensions not unlike the dynamic forces holding an atom or a galaxy together. Each element threatens to go off on its own; yet as long as the balance of forces remains constant, the system functions.”

He studied at Columbia University, where he earned a master’s degree in 1940, a time when few Americans, black or white, aspired to higher education.

One way to assess the value of a person’s life is to look at his legacy. Tolson mentored students that went on to lead lives of influence, including James Farmer (on the debate team in the movie), Heman Sweatt, and Nathan Hare. Two of Tolson’s sons reportedly became college professors.

Henrietta Bell Wells, the last surviving member of the team that defeated the University of Southern California (not Harvard

as depicted in the film) to win the National Championship in 1935, described Tolson as her “crabbiest and best teacher,” according to the New York Times.

The only freshman and only female on the team, she advised Washington, who directed Great Debaters, and urged him to portray her esteemed professor, the Times reports. Bell Wells died in 2008.

Tolson was also twice elected mayor of Langston, Oklahoma.

For more on the extraordinary life of Tolson, visit BlackPast.org.

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