St. Clair Drake (1911-1990)

January 21, 2007 
/ Contributed By: W. Gabriel Selassie I

|

John Gibbs St. Clair Drake

Fair use image

John Gibbs St. Clair Drake was an American anthropologist and sociologist and the founding Director of Stanford University’s African and African American Studies Department in 1968.  Drake was born in Suffolk, Virginia on January 2, 1911.  Drake’s father immigrated to the United States from the Barbados in 1904, and studied at the Virginia Theological Seminary and College in Lynchburg, and upon graduation became a Baptist Preacher. Drake’s mother, Bessie, was a devout churchwoman born in Virginia. When his parents divorced Drake moved to live with his father in Staunton, Virginia.  A few years later Drake accompanied his father to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1916 when the Rev. Drake continued ministering to his African American congregants who migrated north.  Drake later returned to Staunton, Virginia to live with his mother, who had separated and later divorced his father in 1924.

In Virginia Drake began to experience racial segregation. He attended segregated Booker T. Washington High School in Staunton and in 1927 enrolled at the Hampton Institute.  At Hampton Drake met William Allison Davis, who had recently earned an M.A. in English from Harvard University in Massachusetts and who was teaching literature at the Institute.  Davis became Drake’s mentor and the two remained professional colleagues and personal friends for decades.  Drake graduated from Hampton in 1931 with a degree in biology and after graduation he received a one-year scholarship to study peace and race relations at the Quaker Graduate School at Pendle Hill in Pennsylvania.

In 1935, Allison Davis asked Drake to work in Natchez, Mississippi, as an interviewer for the research project he and Burleigh and Mary Gardner were working on for their book Deep South.  Drake interviewed lower-class black residents in Mississippi while Davis and his wife concentrated on the black upper classes in Natchez.  This research encouraged Drake’s later work in Chicago, Illinois’s black community.

In 1935, Drake began teaching anthropology at Dillard University and divided his time between teaching and interviewing in Natchez. Realizing that he required more intensive training in anthropology, Drake entered the graduate program at the University of Chicago.  Drake’s attendance at the University of Chicago was interrupted by his enlistment in the U.S. Merchant Marines in 1939.  In 1942 Drake married Elizabeth Johns, a sociologist.  He served in the Merchant Marines throughout the duration of the war and was discharged in 1945.  He returned to the University of Chicago and completed his Ph.D. in 1953.

Drake’s other works included Churches and Voluntary Associations among Negroes in Chicago (1940) and Black Metropolis: A Study of Negro Life in a Northern City. Black Metropolis (1945) was co-authored with Horace R. Cayton.  The latter study received the Ainsfiled-Wolf award in 1945 as one of the years’ two best books on race relations in an American city.

In 1946 St. Clair Drake received a tenured teaching appointment at Roosevelt College (now university).  While at Roosevelt he helped create their African American Studies program.  Drake remained at Roosevelt until 1968.  Later that year he was asked to lead the development for an Afro American studies program at Stanford University. While at Stanford, he published Black Folk Here and There (2 vols. 1987-1990) an exhaustive and detailed accounting of white racism in world history.  Drake was also a poet and actor and served as an advisor to President Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana.  St. Clair Drake died at the age of 79 in Palo Alto, California on June 21, 1990.

About the Author

Author Profile

W. Gabriel Selassie I is an assistant professor of Africana Studies at California State University, Northridge. He was born in Arizona and resided on the Navajo Indian Reservation before moving to California. He earned a Bachelors of Architecture (5 year professional) from Prairie View A & M University of Texas (HBCU). He earned an M.A. from the California State University at Dominguez Hills in Public History, He also earned an M.A. in African American studies at the University of California at Los Angeles where he did extensive course work in African American nationalism under Robert Hill. He also earned an M.A., and Ph.D. in history from the Claremont Graduate University.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Selassie I, W. (2007, January 21). St. Clair Drake (1911-1990). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/drake-st-clair-1911-1990/

Source of the Author's Information:

George Clement Bond, “A Social Portrait of John Gibbs St. Clair Drake: An American Anthropologist,” American Ethnologist (November 1988); Fourteenth Census of the United States, Schedule No. 1.; Kwame Appiah and Henry Louis Gates, Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African & African American Experience (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005).

Further Reading