Inspirational Stories of Women

Who Made a Difference!

February 21, 2006


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      Welcome to History's Women!
 

Today's biography is about a woman who became the first female millionaire in the United States:  Madame C. J. Walker.

With February being Black History Month, I wanted to make sure to include women of color in this month's issue.  Look for the Black History Month Links at the bottom of the ezine for more great information.

Today's Featured Book is about African American Women preachers...check it out!

Enjoy the issue! 

Patti


If you have trouble reading this issue, you can view it online.

 


         MEMORABLE QUOTE
 

"Memories of our lives, of our works and our   
 deeds will continue in others.
"

                                         ~Rosa Parks
 


      FIRST WOMEN

Madam C.J. Walker
First African-American Female Millionaire
1867-1919

Madam C.J. Walker was a highly successful entrepreneur of the early twentieth century and was also well known as a social activist and philanthropist. Besides being noted as the first female African-American millionaire, Madam Walker was renowned for her stirring political and social advocacy and her humanitarian efforts. An early promoter of women’s economic independence, she provided well-paying jobs for thousands of African-American women who otherwise would have been employed as domestic help and manual laborers.

Madam C.J. Walker was born Sarah Breedlove on December 23, 1867 to Minerva and Owen Breedlove on the shores of the Mississippi River in Delta, Louisiana. Her parents were ex-slaves living on the Burney plantation in Delta and Sarah was the first child of their born in freedom. As a child, Sarah suffered much loss. Her mother died when she was only seven years old and though her father remarried rather quickly he also died before she turned eight. Because her family was poor, her educational opportunities were limited and she received little formal education.

When she was a mere fourteen years old, Sarah married Moses McWilliams so that she might have a home. Making their home in Vicksburg, together they had one daughter, A’Lelia who was born in 1885. Moses died in 1887, leaving the widowed Sarah to provide for her family. She moved with her daughter to St. Louis, Missouri. For the next eighteen years Sarah supported herself and her daughter by obtaining work as a washerwoman.

In 1905, while still living in St. Louis, Sarah had an idea to begin a cosmetics business. She began to develop a hair care and grooming system for African-American women that would heal scalp disease through more frequent shampooing, massage, and an application of her special ointment. She also devised a method for these women to straighten their hair. Before this time African-American women who wanted to de-kink their hair had to iron it with a flat iron with their hair placed on a flat surface. Sarah devised a system to straighten hair that used her hair softener with the aid of a straightening comb.

Encouraged by her success in St. Louis selling her cosmetics and method, Sarah moved to Denver Colorado in July, 1905 where she was joined by her close friend C.J. Walker, a newspaperman. They were married six months later and though they divorced six years later, she kept the name that became famous.

Madam Walker sold her cosmetics and method door-to-door, giving demonstrations to the women of Denver. She also enlisted the help of other women hired as agent-operators to sell her products. These women became known as “hair culturists” and “scalp specialists”. Walker required her agents to sign a contract binding them to a hygienic regimen and in her meetings with them she stressed the importance of cleanliness and attractiveness as an aid to self-respect and racial advancement.

With others selling her method and product for her, Madam Walker was able to concentrate her efforts on the instruction of her methods and on the manufacture of her product line. In 1910 she built a plant in Indianapolis, Indiana that would serve as a center of the Walker enterprises. The company had many branches including the Walker College of Hair Culture and Walker Manufacturing Company, remained in business until it was sold in 1985. The Madame C.J. Walker Manufacturing Company provided employment for over three thousand people and Walker herself claimed that her multi-level sales force had over 20,000 agents by 1919.

Madam Walker was a generous donor to black charities and was active in black philanthropic work. In fact, she made the largest single donation to the National Association of Colored Women’s effort to buy the home of Frederick Douglass to be preserved as a museum. She also contributed generously to such organizations as the Y.M.C.A. of Indianapolis, the National Association of Colored People and to several organizations that provided help to the needy in Indianapolis and scholarships for young men and women at the Tuskegee Institute. Sarah also encouraged her employees in their own community philanthropic work, giving cash prizes to the groups of agents that did the largest amount of community work.

At the height of her success, Madam Walker was diagnosed with hypertension and doctors suggested she reduce her activity level. Nevertheless, Sarah did not heed their advice and continued her busy schedule. She soon became ill and died on May 25, 1919 as a result of chronic interstitial nephritis, kidney failure, and hypertension. Despite her impoverished beginnings, Madam C.J. Walker became known as the wealthiest African-American woman of her time and, to her credit, she used her prominent position to fight against racial discrimination and her substantial fortune to support civic, educational, and social agencies to aid her fellow African-Americans.
 


Daughters of Thunder
Black Women Preachers & Their Sermons, 1850-1979
By Bettye Collier-Thomas
$29.00

 

This historic collection of never-before-published sermons by African American women preachers gives voice to the long-ignored founding mothers of the African American church. It provides long overdue access to the original text of the sermons coupled with expert contextual analysis by Dr. Bettye Collier-Thomas, a respected scholar of African American history.

These sermons reveal women of great faith, courage, and wisdom and cover a range of topics, from racial and gender discrimination in the church and society to the tenets of their shared theology. Addressing causes and issues of enduring importance, these sermons still resonate today and help us to understand the past.

In a special chapter, Collier-Thomas tells the story of the earliest black women preachers who, while their sermons have yet to be unearthed, greatly influenced both their contemporaries and those who followed by their courageous claiming of the pulpit.

Daughters of Thunder sheds new light on an important chapter in American history. Preachers will find within these pages inspiration for their own sermons.

Bettye Collier-Thomas is associate professor of history and director of the Temple University Center for African American History and Culture.

You can purchase this book for $29.99 set for with FREE Shipping by clicking here.


BLACK HISTORY MONTH LINKS

Women in African American History

The Women's Hall of Fame

Ida Wells-Barnett

Phillis Wheatly

Coretta Scott King

Rosa Parks


History's Women Newsletter is for informational purposes only.  Patricia Chadwick in no event is to be liable for any damages whatsoever resulting from any action arising in connection with the use of this information or its publication, including any action for infringement of copyright or defamation.


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History's Women is a free weekly newsletter for those interested in inspirational stories of women who made a difference in their world. The content of this newsletter is copyrighted by Patricia Chadwick (c)2006 unless indicated otherwise. All rights reserved worldwide.  Reprint only with permission from copyright holder(s).

Permission is granted to distribute the contents of this newsletter for personal use as long as credit is given with a link to our page at http://www.historyswomen.com and the entire newsletter is included.  Most articles are available for free reprint in your newsletter. Email info@historyswomen.com for details.


 Patricia Chadwick

Founder & Publisher


History's Women
A magazine highlighting the extraordinary

achievements of women throughout history.

http://www.historyswomen.com
mail to:info@historyswomen.com


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