BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY
Mary Church Terrell
Mary Church Terrell
Mary church terrell.jpg
Born Mary Church
September 23, 1863
Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
Died July 24, 1954 (aged 90)
Annapolis, Maryland, U.S.
Nationality American
Other names Euphemia Kirk
Known for One of the first African-American women to earn a college degree
Parent(s) Robert Reed Church
Louisa Ayers
Mary Church Terrell (September 23, 1863 – July 24, 1954) was one of the first African-American women to earn a college degree, and became known as a national activist for civil rights and suffrage; in 1909 she was a founding member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. She taught and was a principal at an academic high school in Washington, DC; in 1896 she was the first African-American woman in the United States to be appointed to a school board of a major city, serving in the District of Columbia until 1906. Terrell led several important associations, including the National Association of Colored Women.
Terrell was the daughter of former mixed-race slaves who helped build the black elite in Memphis, Tennessee after the American Civil War. Her father Robert Reed Church became a wealthy business entrepreneur and was widely considered the first African-American millionaire in the South.[1]
Contents [hide]
1 Early life and education
2 Career
3 Marriage and family
4 Activism
5 Legacy and honors
6 Works
Early life and education
Mary Church was born in Memphis, Tennessee, to Robert Reed Church and Louisa Ayers, both former slaves of mixed race. Robert Church's mother was daughter of a Malagasy mother and white planter father; and his father was Captain Charles B. Church, a steamship owner and operator from Virginia. His father allowed Church to keep wages earned as a steward on his ship; the younger man bought his first property in Memphis in 186. He continued to invest in real estate, especially after the city was depopulated following the 1878 yellow fever epidemic, and developed his wealth in real estate as the city recovered. Multiple sources refer to Church as the first black millionaire in the South, although it is now generally accepted that his wealth reached only $700,000.[1]
Both of Mary Church's parents stressed education; when she was six years old, her parents sent her to the Antioch College Model School in Yellow Springs, Ohio, for her elementary and secondary education. Mary, known to members of her family as "Mollie," and a brother were born during their father's first marriage, which ended in divorce. Their half-siblings, Robert, Jr. and Annette, were born during their father's second marriage, to Anna (Wright) Church. Robert Church later married a third time.
When Church majored in classics at Oberlin College, which accepted all races and genders, she was an African-American woman among mostly white male students. The freshman class nominated her as class poet, and she was elected to two of the college's literary societies. She also served as an editor of The Oberlin Review. When she earned her bachelor's degree in 1884, she was one of the first African-American women to do so. Church also earned a master's degree from Oberlin in 1888.
Career
Painting of Mary Church Terrell by Betsy Graves Reyneau, 1888-1964
Church started her work life teaching at a black secondary school in Washington, DC, and at Wilberforce College, an historically black college founded collaboratively by the Methodist Church in Ohio and the African Methodist Episcopal Church in the state. The AME Church bought it at the time of the outbreak of the Civil War, when the Methodist Church had to withdraw its support, and operated it as the first black-controlled college. After teaching for a time, Church studied in Europe for two years, where she became fluent in French, German, and Italian. She returned to teaching and eventually became principal of the high school.
Marriage and family
On October 18, 1891, in Memphis, Church married Robert Heberton Terrell, a lawyer who became the first black municipal court judge in Washington, DC. The couple had met in Washington, DC through Church's work at the M Street High School, a top academic high school, where she taught and became principal.
Terrell and her husband had three children who died in infancy; their daughter Phyllis was the only one to survive to adulthood.[2] Phyllis was named after Phillis Wheatley.[3] The Terrells later adopted a second daughter, Mary.
Activism
Through her father, Terrell met activist Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington, director of the influential Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. She was especially close to Douglass and worked with him on several civil rights campaigns. Shortly after her marriage to Robert Terrell, she considered retiring from activism to focus on family life. Douglass persuaded her that her talents required her to stay in public life. [2]
In 1896, Terrell became the first president of the newly formed National Association of Colored Women. NACW members established day nurseries and kindergartens, and helped orphans. Also in 1896, she founded the National Association of College Women, which later became the National Association of University Women (NAUW). The League started a training program and kindergarten before these were included in the Washington, DC public schools.
Combined with her achievements as a principal, the success of the League's educational initiatives led to Terrell's appointment to the District of Columbia Board of Education, 1895-1906. She was the first black woman in the United States to hold such a position. She was also an active member of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. She was particularly concerned that the organization continue fighting for suffrage among black women. With Josephine St.Pierre Ruffin, she formed the Federation of Afro-American Women.
Historians have generally emphasized Terrell's role as an activist and community leader during the Progressive Era. She also had a prosperous career as a journalist (she identified as a writer). Using the pen name "Euphemia Kirk," she published in both the black and white press to promote the African American Women's Club Movement (Terrell, 1940). She wrote for a variety of newspapers "published either by or in the interest of colored people (Terrell, 1940, p. 222)," such as the A.M.E. Church Review of Philadelphia, PA; the Southern Workman of Hampton, VA; the Indianapolis Freeman;the Afro-American of Baltimore; the Washington Tribune; the Chicago Defender; the New York Age; the Voice of the Negro; the Women's World; and the Norfolk Journal and Guide (Terrell, 1940). She also contributed to the Washington Evening Star and the Washington Post (Terrell, 1940). She aligned the African-American Women's Club Movement and the overall struggle of black women and the black race for equality. In 1892 she was elected as the first woman president of the prominent Washington DC black debate organization Bethel Literary and Historical Society[4]
In 1904 Terrell was invited to speak at the International Congress of Women, held in Berlin, Germany. She was the only black woman at the conference. She received an enthusiastic ovation when she honored the host nation by delivering her address in German. She delivered the speech in French, and concluded with the English version.[2]
In 1909, Terrell was one of two black woman (journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett was the other) invited to sign the “Call” and to attend the first organizational meeting of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), becoming a founding member. In 1913-14, she helped organize the Delta Sigma Theta sorority. More than a quarter-century later, she helped write its creed that set up a code of conduct for black women.
In World War I (WWI), Terrell was involved with the War Camp Community Service, which supported recreation for servicemen. Later it aided in issues related to the demobilization of Negro servicemen. As WWI was winding down, Terrell and her daughter Phyllis joined Alice Paul and Lucy Burns, of the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage (CUWS), to picket the White House on issues related to the need of black veterans for jobs. Terrell was a delegate to the International Peace Conference after the end of the war. While in England, she stayed with H. G. Wells and his wife at their invitation.
Terrell worked actively in the women's suffrage movement, which pushed for enactment of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Active in the Republican Party, she was president of the Women's Republican League during Warren G. Harding's 1920 presidential campaign and the first election in which all American women were given the right to vote;[2] Terrell reportedly said of the party: "Every right that has been bestowed upon blacks was initiated by the Republican Party."[5] However, the Democrat-controlled Southern states from 1890 to 1908 had passed voter registration and election laws that effectively disfranchised most blacks. Those restrictions were not fully overturned until after congressional passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Terrell wrote an autobiography, A Colored Woman in a White World (1940).
In 1950 she started what would be a successful fight to integrate eating places in the District of Columbia. In the 1890s the District of Columbia had formalized segregation as did states in the South. Before then, local integration laws dating to the 1870s had required all eating-place proprietors "to serve any respectable, well-behaved person regardless of color, or face a $1,000 fine and forfeiture of their license." In 1949, Dr. Terrell and colleagues Clark F. King, Essie Thompson, and Arthur F. Elmer entered the segregated Thompson Restaurant. When refused service, they promptly filed a lawsuit. Attorney Ringgold Hart, representing Thompson, argued on April 1, 1950, that the District laws were unconstitutional and later won the case against restaurant segregation. In the three years pending a decision in District of Columbia v. John R. Thompson Co., Terrell targeted other restaurants. Her tactics included boycotts, picketing, and sit-ins. Finally, on June 8, 1953, the court ruled that segregated eating places in Washington, DC, were unconstitutional.
After the age of 80, Terrell continued to participate in picket lines, protesting the segregation of restaurants and theaters. During her senior years, she also succeeded in persuading the local chapter of the American Association of University Women to admit black members.
She lived to see the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education, holding unconstitutional the racial segregation of public schools. Terrell died two months later at the age of 90, on July 24, 1954, in Anne Arundel General Hospital. It was the week before the NACW was to hold its annual meeting, that year at her town of Annapolis, Maryland.
Legacy and honors
1933 - At Oberlin College's centennial celebration, Terrell was recognized among the college's "Top 100 Outstanding Alumni".[6]
1948 - Oberlin awarded Terrell the honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters.
1954, First Lady Mamie Eisenhower paid tribute to Terrell's memory in a letter read to the NACW convention on August 1, writing, "For more than 60 years, her great gifts were dedicated to the betterment of humanity, and she left a truly inspiring record."[7]
1975 - The Mary Church Terrell house in the LeDroit Park neighborhood of Washington was named a National Historic Landmark.
In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante included Mary Church Terrell on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.[8]
2009- Terrell was among 12 pioneers of civil rights commemorated in a United States Postal Service postage stamp series.[9]
Works[edit]
"Duty of the National Association of Colored Women to the Race", A. M. E. Church Review (January 1900), 340-54.
"Club Work of Colored Women", Southern Workman, August 8, 1901, 435-38.
"Society Among the Colored People of Washington", Voice of the Negro (April 1904), 150-56.
"Lynching from a Negro's Point of View", North American Review 178 (June 1904), 853-68.
"The Washington Conservatory of Music for Colored People", Voice of the Negro (November 1904), 525-30.
"Purity and the Negro", Light (June 1905), 19-25.
"Paul Lawrence Dunbar", Voice of the Negro (April 1906), 271-77.
"Susan B. Anthony, the Abolitionist", Voice of the Negro (June 1906), 411-16.
"A Plea for the White South by a Colored Woman", Nineteenth Century (July 1906), 70-84.
"What It Means to Be Colored in the Capital of the United States", Independent, October 10, 1906, 181-86.
"An Interview with W. T. Stead on the Race Problem", Voice of the Negro (July 1907), 327-30
"Peonage in the United States: The Convict Lease System and the Chain Gangs", Nineteenth Century 62 (August 1907), 306-22.
"Phyllis Wheatley - An African Genius". Star of the West 19 (7): 221–23. October 1928. Retrieved December 24, 2013. (see Phyllis Wheatley.)
A Colored Woman in a White World (1940), autobiography.
"I Remember Frederick Douglass", Ebony (1953), 73-80.
Mary Church Terrell
Mary Church Terrell
Mary church terrell.jpg
Born Mary Church
September 23, 1863
Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
Died July 24, 1954 (aged 90)
Annapolis, Maryland, U.S.
Nationality American
Other names Euphemia Kirk
Known for One of the first African-American women to earn a college degree
Parent(s) Robert Reed Church
Louisa Ayers
Mary Church Terrell (September 23, 1863 – July 24, 1954) was one of the first African-American women to earn a college degree, and became known as a national activist for civil rights and suffrage; in 1909 she was a founding member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. She taught and was a principal at an academic high school in Washington, DC; in 1896 she was the first African-American woman in the United States to be appointed to a school board of a major city, serving in the District of Columbia until 1906. Terrell led several important associations, including the National Association of Colored Women.
Terrell was the daughter of former mixed-race slaves who helped build the black elite in Memphis, Tennessee after the American Civil War. Her father Robert Reed Church became a wealthy business entrepreneur and was widely considered the first African-American millionaire in the South.[1]
Contents [hide]
1 Early life and education
2 Career
3 Marriage and family
4 Activism
5 Legacy and honors
6 Works
Early life and education
Mary Church was born in Memphis, Tennessee, to Robert Reed Church and Louisa Ayers, both former slaves of mixed race. Robert Church's mother was daughter of a Malagasy mother and white planter father; and his father was Captain Charles B. Church, a steamship owner and operator from Virginia. His father allowed Church to keep wages earned as a steward on his ship; the younger man bought his first property in Memphis in 186. He continued to invest in real estate, especially after the city was depopulated following the 1878 yellow fever epidemic, and developed his wealth in real estate as the city recovered. Multiple sources refer to Church as the first black millionaire in the South, although it is now generally accepted that his wealth reached only $700,000.[1]
Both of Mary Church's parents stressed education; when she was six years old, her parents sent her to the Antioch College Model School in Yellow Springs, Ohio, for her elementary and secondary education. Mary, known to members of her family as "Mollie," and a brother were born during their father's first marriage, which ended in divorce. Their half-siblings, Robert, Jr. and Annette, were born during their father's second marriage, to Anna (Wright) Church. Robert Church later married a third time.
When Church majored in classics at Oberlin College, which accepted all races and genders, she was an African-American woman among mostly white male students. The freshman class nominated her as class poet, and she was elected to two of the college's literary societies. She also served as an editor of The Oberlin Review. When she earned her bachelor's degree in 1884, she was one of the first African-American women to do so. Church also earned a master's degree from Oberlin in 1888.
Career
Painting of Mary Church Terrell by Betsy Graves Reyneau, 1888-1964
Church started her work life teaching at a black secondary school in Washington, DC, and at Wilberforce College, an historically black college founded collaboratively by the Methodist Church in Ohio and the African Methodist Episcopal Church in the state. The AME Church bought it at the time of the outbreak of the Civil War, when the Methodist Church had to withdraw its support, and operated it as the first black-controlled college. After teaching for a time, Church studied in Europe for two years, where she became fluent in French, German, and Italian. She returned to teaching and eventually became principal of the high school.
Marriage and family
On October 18, 1891, in Memphis, Church married Robert Heberton Terrell, a lawyer who became the first black municipal court judge in Washington, DC. The couple had met in Washington, DC through Church's work at the M Street High School, a top academic high school, where she taught and became principal.
Terrell and her husband had three children who died in infancy; their daughter Phyllis was the only one to survive to adulthood.[2] Phyllis was named after Phillis Wheatley.[3] The Terrells later adopted a second daughter, Mary.
Activism
Through her father, Terrell met activist Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington, director of the influential Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. She was especially close to Douglass and worked with him on several civil rights campaigns. Shortly after her marriage to Robert Terrell, she considered retiring from activism to focus on family life. Douglass persuaded her that her talents required her to stay in public life. [2]
In 1896, Terrell became the first president of the newly formed National Association of Colored Women. NACW members established day nurseries and kindergartens, and helped orphans. Also in 1896, she founded the National Association of College Women, which later became the National Association of University Women (NAUW). The League started a training program and kindergarten before these were included in the Washington, DC public schools.
Combined with her achievements as a principal, the success of the League's educational initiatives led to Terrell's appointment to the District of Columbia Board of Education, 1895-1906. She was the first black woman in the United States to hold such a position. She was also an active member of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. She was particularly concerned that the organization continue fighting for suffrage among black women. With Josephine St.Pierre Ruffin, she formed the Federation of Afro-American Women.
Historians have generally emphasized Terrell's role as an activist and community leader during the Progressive Era. She also had a prosperous career as a journalist (she identified as a writer). Using the pen name "Euphemia Kirk," she published in both the black and white press to promote the African American Women's Club Movement (Terrell, 1940). She wrote for a variety of newspapers "published either by or in the interest of colored people (Terrell, 1940, p. 222)," such as the A.M.E. Church Review of Philadelphia, PA; the Southern Workman of Hampton, VA; the Indianapolis Freeman;the Afro-American of Baltimore; the Washington Tribune; the Chicago Defender; the New York Age; the Voice of the Negro; the Women's World; and the Norfolk Journal and Guide (Terrell, 1940). She also contributed to the Washington Evening Star and the Washington Post (Terrell, 1940). She aligned the African-American Women's Club Movement and the overall struggle of black women and the black race for equality. In 1892 she was elected as the first woman president of the prominent Washington DC black debate organization Bethel Literary and Historical Society[4]
In 1904 Terrell was invited to speak at the International Congress of Women, held in Berlin, Germany. She was the only black woman at the conference. She received an enthusiastic ovation when she honored the host nation by delivering her address in German. She delivered the speech in French, and concluded with the English version.[2]
In 1909, Terrell was one of two black woman (journalist Ida B. Wells-Barnett was the other) invited to sign the “Call” and to attend the first organizational meeting of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), becoming a founding member. In 1913-14, she helped organize the Delta Sigma Theta sorority. More than a quarter-century later, she helped write its creed that set up a code of conduct for black women.
In World War I (WWI), Terrell was involved with the War Camp Community Service, which supported recreation for servicemen. Later it aided in issues related to the demobilization of Negro servicemen. As WWI was winding down, Terrell and her daughter Phyllis joined Alice Paul and Lucy Burns, of the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage (CUWS), to picket the White House on issues related to the need of black veterans for jobs. Terrell was a delegate to the International Peace Conference after the end of the war. While in England, she stayed with H. G. Wells and his wife at their invitation.
Terrell worked actively in the women's suffrage movement, which pushed for enactment of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Active in the Republican Party, she was president of the Women's Republican League during Warren G. Harding's 1920 presidential campaign and the first election in which all American women were given the right to vote;[2] Terrell reportedly said of the party: "Every right that has been bestowed upon blacks was initiated by the Republican Party."[5] However, the Democrat-controlled Southern states from 1890 to 1908 had passed voter registration and election laws that effectively disfranchised most blacks. Those restrictions were not fully overturned until after congressional passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Terrell wrote an autobiography, A Colored Woman in a White World (1940).
In 1950 she started what would be a successful fight to integrate eating places in the District of Columbia. In the 1890s the District of Columbia had formalized segregation as did states in the South. Before then, local integration laws dating to the 1870s had required all eating-place proprietors "to serve any respectable, well-behaved person regardless of color, or face a $1,000 fine and forfeiture of their license." In 1949, Dr. Terrell and colleagues Clark F. King, Essie Thompson, and Arthur F. Elmer entered the segregated Thompson Restaurant. When refused service, they promptly filed a lawsuit. Attorney Ringgold Hart, representing Thompson, argued on April 1, 1950, that the District laws were unconstitutional and later won the case against restaurant segregation. In the three years pending a decision in District of Columbia v. John R. Thompson Co., Terrell targeted other restaurants. Her tactics included boycotts, picketing, and sit-ins. Finally, on June 8, 1953, the court ruled that segregated eating places in Washington, DC, were unconstitutional.
After the age of 80, Terrell continued to participate in picket lines, protesting the segregation of restaurants and theaters. During her senior years, she also succeeded in persuading the local chapter of the American Association of University Women to admit black members.
She lived to see the Supreme Court's decision in Brown v. Board of Education, holding unconstitutional the racial segregation of public schools. Terrell died two months later at the age of 90, on July 24, 1954, in Anne Arundel General Hospital. It was the week before the NACW was to hold its annual meeting, that year at her town of Annapolis, Maryland.
Legacy and honors
1933 - At Oberlin College's centennial celebration, Terrell was recognized among the college's "Top 100 Outstanding Alumni".[6]
1948 - Oberlin awarded Terrell the honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters.
1954, First Lady Mamie Eisenhower paid tribute to Terrell's memory in a letter read to the NACW convention on August 1, writing, "For more than 60 years, her great gifts were dedicated to the betterment of humanity, and she left a truly inspiring record."[7]
1975 - The Mary Church Terrell house in the LeDroit Park neighborhood of Washington was named a National Historic Landmark.
In 2002, scholar Molefi Kete Asante included Mary Church Terrell on his list of 100 Greatest African Americans.[8]
2009- Terrell was among 12 pioneers of civil rights commemorated in a United States Postal Service postage stamp series.[9]
Works[edit]
"Duty of the National Association of Colored Women to the Race", A. M. E. Church Review (January 1900), 340-54.
"Club Work of Colored Women", Southern Workman, August 8, 1901, 435-38.
"Society Among the Colored People of Washington", Voice of the Negro (April 1904), 150-56.
"Lynching from a Negro's Point of View", North American Review 178 (June 1904), 853-68.
"The Washington Conservatory of Music for Colored People", Voice of the Negro (November 1904), 525-30.
"Purity and the Negro", Light (June 1905), 19-25.
"Paul Lawrence Dunbar", Voice of the Negro (April 1906), 271-77.
"Susan B. Anthony, the Abolitionist", Voice of the Negro (June 1906), 411-16.
"A Plea for the White South by a Colored Woman", Nineteenth Century (July 1906), 70-84.
"What It Means to Be Colored in the Capital of the United States", Independent, October 10, 1906, 181-86.
"An Interview with W. T. Stead on the Race Problem", Voice of the Negro (July 1907), 327-30
"Peonage in the United States: The Convict Lease System and the Chain Gangs", Nineteenth Century 62 (August 1907), 306-22.
"Phyllis Wheatley - An African Genius". Star of the West 19 (7): 221–23. October 1928. Retrieved December 24, 2013. (see Phyllis Wheatley.)
A Colored Woman in a White World (1940), autobiography.
"I Remember Frederick Douglass", Ebony (1953), 73-80.
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