Leedell Wallace Neyland (August 4, 1921 - June 6, 2020) was an educator and author in Florida. He was a professor emeritus of history, provost, and dean at Florida A&M University[1] where he joined in 1956 and retired in 1991.[2]
He was born in Gloster, Mississippi and served in the U.S. Navy. He was interviewed about his service in a recording kept at the Library of Congress.[3] He graduated from Virginia State University in 1949 and earned his Master's and Phd degrees from New York University.[1] He received a Danforth Teachers Grant.[4]
He wrote papers on various subjects including teaching Black history in schools, Florida A&M's business school, and Black land grant colleges and their role in agriculture and home economics.[5]
He wrote a novel about a fire at a Natchez, Mississippi club that he survived, but some 200 others did not.[6]
He advocated for black students to take more college entrance exams in Florida and called for improvements and investments to address educational gaps between white and black students.[7]
The History of the Florida State Teachers Association by Gilbert L. Porter and Leedell W. Neyland, National Education Association (1977)
The History of the Florida Interscholastic Athletic Association, 1932-1968 by Leedell W. Neyland, Matthew H. Estaras, and Wilts C. Alexander, Leedella Educational and Consultant Service (1982)[13][14]
Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University: A Centennial History Florida A&M University Foundation (1987)
Unquenchable Black Fires (1994)
Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University: Sixteen Years of Excellence with Caring (1985-2001) Florida A & M University Foundation (2001)
^ abNeyland, Leedell W. (November 26, 1970). "Twelve Black Floridians". Tallahassee, Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Foundation – via Internet Archive.