Premium Only Content

CHANNING H. TOBIAS (1882-1961)
Channing H. Tobias acquired fame through his work with the YMCA. Born in Augusta, Georgia on February 1, 1882 to Fair and Bell Robinson Tobias, young Channing received his bachelor’s degree from Paine College in 1902. Tobias left Georgia to study religion at Drew Theological Seminary in Madison, New Jersey. After spending time at the University of Pennsylvania, Tobias returned to Paine and served as a professor of Biblical Literature. Meanwhile, Tobias received a doctorate in Divinity from Gammon Theological Seminary.
As early as 1905 Tobias joined the YMCA and eventually became Secretary of the National Council. He also served the organization as the student secretary for the International Committee. In 1923 Tobias was appointed Senior Secretary in the Department of Interracial Services within the Colored Work Department, a position he held for twenty-three years. As head of the Interracial Services Division, Tobias strenuously endeavored to enhance race relations in the United States and abroad. As a member of the Executive Committee of the National Interracial Conference and as the associate director of the Commission on Interracial Cooperation, Tobias campaigned to promote interracial cooperation and redress racial grievances. His crowning public achievement in interracial affairs occurred when he became a delegate and speaker at the 1926 World Conference in Finland.
After retiring from the YMCA in 1946, Tobias became the first black director of the Phelps-Stokes Fund, a philanthropic association that awarded funds to institutions that provided educational opportunities for African American children. Tobias also became active in the NAACP and received the coveted Spingarn Medal in 1948 for distinguished work on behalf of African Americans.
Tobias served on numerous boards, including the Committee on Race Relations and the Commission on the Church and Minority Groups of the Federal Council of Churches, as well as the board of trustees for Howard University, Hampton Institute, and the NAACP. During World War II Tobias was appointed by President Franklin Roosevelt to the National Advisory Committee on Selective Service during World War II. In 1946 President Harry Truman appointed Tobias to the Civil Rights Committee. He also served the United States as an alternate representative to the Sixth Assembly to the United Nations. Channing H. Tobias, a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, died on November 5, 1961.
-
17:19
Forgotten Black History
9 months agoKATT WILLIAMS Finds Out The Hidden Truth About Our Identity as the Chosen People
2181 -
1:02:11
DeVory Darkins
2 hours ago $5.07 earnedDemocrats suffers ANNIHILATION during heated hearing with Bondi as Jack Smith bombshell drops
20.7K32 -
40:59
Dad Saves America
23 hours ago $1.08 earnedThe Radical Left’s True Romance: Revolution & Chaos
15.6K13 -
1:07:42
vivafrei
5 hours agoJack Smith SPIED on GOP Lawmakers? Ottawa Trucker Protest Organizers SENTENCED! & MORE!
116K49 -
LIVE
LFA TV
20 hours agoLIVE & BREAKING NEWS! | TUESDAY 10/7/25
1,000 watching -
2:00:50
The Quartering
4 hours agoPam Bondi GRILLED, CIA Coverup, DEI Backfire & Taylor Swift Cancelled!
129K50 -
1:25:13
Awaken With JP
5 hours agoKirk Conspiracies Heat Up, Netflix Castrates Itself, and More!
72.4K55 -
LIVE
freecastle
6 hours agoTAKE UP YOUR CROSS- Press on toward the goal to win the prize for which GOD has called You!
76 watching -
LIVE
The Nunn Report - w/ Dan Nunn
3 hours ago[Ep 764] Jack Smith For Prison | Pritzker Says Ice Lies, Sides w/ Criminals | Guest Sam Anthony
81 watching -
1:48:42
Steven Crowder
9 hours agoDid You Vote for This: Why The Podcast Bros are Turning on Trump
524K633