“WITNESS FOR THE LONG HAUL”
In 1948 at
age 85, in a snowstorm in December in DC, a stooped white-haired old lady,
wearing finery such as a fur coat and pearls, leaned on a cane and led a march
urging the downtown Kresge store to desegregate its facilities. She had been protesting racial and gender
injustice since the mid-1870’s. Her name
at that time was Mary Church Terrell, but at her birth she was Mary (Mollie)
Church.
In her
autobiography “A Colored Woman in a White World,” published in 1940, she wrote
“If it hadn’t been for the victory of the Union Army, I should be on some
plantation in the South, manacled body and soul in the fetters of a slave.“ She was born in September, 1863, in Memphis,
just nine months after Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation was took
effect. She would join Ida Wells as one
of the primary African-American women who worked for the passage of the 19th
Amendment, which gave women the right to vote.
Though her status as slave or free was in doubt until the Confederate
surrender at Appomattox, she was born into a wealthy black family, headed by
Robert Church. She had the many
advantages of being wealthy in America, with one huge exception: her racial classification was “black.” She would wrestle with the meaning and the
struggle of such classification all her life.
In 1866,
those classified as white in Memphis began the terrorizing work of
re-establishing slavery by fomenting a white race riot, and her father was shot
in the head. He recovered, and then he
decided to send Mary Church north for her education. She
enrolled in Antioch College Model School in Ohio at age 6 – she was the only
African-American in her class. At age 12
she enrolled for high school and college at Oberlin, and in her first year in
high school she wrote an essay entitled “Resolved, There Should Be a Sixteenth
Amendment to the Constitution Granting Suffrage to Women.” She indicated that she could not remember a
time when she did not believe in votes for women.
After
graduating from college, she became active in education for black children and
began working in earnest for women’s rights and the right to vote for
women. In the fight for women’s rights,
she stepped headlong into the intersection between race and gender, which
divided the women’s rights movement.
Most southern white suffragists opposed rights for black women, and
Northern white women feared the loss of white southern women’s support over
this issue. Lest this seem like ancient
history, let us note that the tensions over this intersection of race and
gender continue right up to the present moment.
She began attending the meetings of the National American Woman Suffrage
Association, where she met Susan B. Anthony and became friends with her. Terrell gave an address in 1898 to the
Association entitled “The Progress and Problems of Colored Women.” Most of the white women attendees were
astonished at her prowess, and while she loved the adoration, she also knew
that it meant that their racism deeply affected their expectations: black women simply were unable to do these
kinds of things. She signed on to do a
lecture tour, which she continued to do for many years. She also was a founding member of the NAACP,
and she kept working for rights for those classified as “black” and for all
women.
After the
19th Amendment was finally passed, Terrell worked hard to try to get
black women included in this idea, but as we all know, she (and many others)
failed. The denial of the vote to black
women (and men) would continue until the Voting Rights act of 1965 was passed,
but the tensions between white women and women of color, especially black
women, continue to hinder us all in the fight for justice and equity.
The
ratification of the ERA by the legislature of Virginia earlier this year may
lead to its addition to the Constitution, building on the work of many women of
all colors. Warriors like Terrell and
Ida Wells would be glad, but they would still ask: “What’s in it for black women and other women
of color?” It will be our generation and
those to come who will answer that question.
What will our witness look like over the long haul? If we make it to age 85, will we be out in
the snow, standing and protesting and working for justice and equity?
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