CASL course project highlights African-American female activists

June 18, 2018

Students in the 鈥榃omen in Leadership鈥 course researched the social change work of four relatively unknown women in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

 Students present their research at Meeting of Minds
Students present their research at Meeting of Minds

Not all leaders seek the limelight. But it doesn鈥檛 mean they shouldn鈥檛 be brought out of the shadows.

鈥淯nsung Heroes: African American Women鈥檚 Leadership in the Era before Civil Rights,鈥 a student research project in History Professor Georgina Hickey鈥檚 Women in Leadership course, highlights the social change work of four relatively unknown women in the 19th and early 20th centuries. The class researched the lives of Clarissa Minnie Thompson Allen, Mary 鈥淢amie鈥 P. Burrill, Lillian Parker Thomas Fox and Laura A. Moore Westbrook.

鈥淣ot everyone is going to be the face of a movement, but that doesn鈥檛 mean you aren鈥檛 making a difference. Actually, these women made a large impact in their circles,鈥 said senior Courtney Grove-Dyer. 鈥淭hey were on the ground, supporting the people who were in the public eye. It was part of the strategy.鈥

The women were linked to high-profile suffrage and civil rights movement activists like Ida B. Wells and W.E.B. Du Bois, according to secondary sources. But outside of a name, not much other information was known.

鈥淭hese women鈥檚 names came to us because they were included in a photographic collection that landed at the Library of Congress. Their names have been vaguely associated with suffrage. But the question is how did they get there and what have they done?鈥 Hickey asked. 鈥淭hat is what the students set out to find.鈥

The eight students, who worked in groups of two, presented their findings at the campus-hosted 26th Meeting of Minds and at the Donor Celebratory events in May.

The biographies also will be published this fall in the Online Biographical Dictionary of the Woman Suffrage Movement in the United States. The online journal and database is organized by award-winning historical researcher Thomas Dublin, who co-directs the Center for the Historical Study of Women and Gender at Binghamton University in New York. Hickey regularly partners with Dublin on database research and he provides the names for the Women in Leadership course research project.

Grove-Dyer and senior Brittany Richmond spent nearly four months uncovering pieces about Laura A. Moore Westbrook鈥檚 life. Research involved in-depth engagement with a variety of primary sources, including newspapers, photographs, census records and organizational documents.

When the project began, they thought writing a 500-word biography would be relatively simple. But then the duo realized how labor-intensive the research process could be.

鈥淲hen it took us a month to find a death year鈥攏ot a date, a year鈥攖he importance of our work really hit me,鈥 said Richmond, who found a brief mention of Westbrook鈥檚 1894 death announcement in a library鈥檚 newspaper archive collection in Texas. They looked into Texas resources after learning she resided there. 鈥淭he mention we found didn鈥檛 say how she died or give a date. But we were able to identify a year by the paper鈥檚 publication date.鈥

In their research, the team learned that Westbrook encouraged her chapter of the Women鈥檚 Christian Temperance Union to be the first chapter in the South to officially endorse women鈥檚 suffrage. She also served on a Texas governmental  advisory board where she evaluated scholarship applications to Prairie View A&M University, the first state-supported college for African Americans.

Grove-Dyer said even with each woman鈥檚 different backgrounds and histories, the class noticed that the four female activists developed similar themes and tactics, lecturing and writing about important issues they encounter.

鈥淭hey developed a vision for uplifting their families and communities, understanding suffrage and education as tools to combat racial discrimination and promote African American advancement,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 looking for recognition; they were organizers looking to advance human rights. And I think there is something that we can all learn from that too.鈥