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History Of the Feminist
Movement This is by no means a history of the entire feminist
movement, just bits and pieces of our past. Currently, this is a space for
images (click on them for a larger one), text and information that the
Feminist Collective have come across and has shown on previous
sites.
Table of Contents: +Mary Woolley (President of MHC) on
Women's Ballot +Picket Line picture +History of the Clothesline
Project +The Progress of Colored Women

 Mary Woolley
(President of MHC) on Women's Ballot
 The first picket line,
college day. According to rumor, there were reps from all the Seven
Sisters colleges there, and the Mount Holyoke rep is the one with her sash
backwards.
History of the Clothsline
Project Look for information regaring this year's event on the
Upcoming Events page in the near future!
HISTORY OF THE CLOTHESLINE
PROJECT The clothesline project began in 1990 when members of the Cape
Cod Women’s Agenda learned that during the Vietnam War years when 58,000
American soldiers were killed, 51,000 women were killed in the US by men
who supposedly loved them. The Clothesline Project reveals the extent of
violence against women with the visual impact of the AIDS quilt and the
Vietnam Wall. OBJECTIVES OF THE FIVE COLLEGE CLOTHESLINE PROJECT +
To bear witness to woman and children victims and survivors of
violence + To aid and support the healing process of those who have
lost a loved one or are themselves targets of violence + To break the
silence and unite local women and children with those around the country,
and the world, in a demonstration of solidarity against physical, verbal,
sexual, psychological, and social abuse
CREATING A SHIRT Shirts
can be decorated, written on, or anything else you may want to do. Express
yourself however is most comfortable and powerful for you. A shirt
should be created by the survivor herself, with the exception of white
shirts, which may be created in memorial. Please use only first names
or initials if naming the perpetrator
SHIRT COLORS These colors
are not mandatory. The color schemes are designed so that the Clothesline
will be a consistent visual representation. WHITE - For women and
children killed BEIGE - For women and children battered or
assaulted RED, PINK, ORANGE - For women and children raped BLUE,
GREEN - For women incest survivors or sexually abused children PURPLE -
For women victimized for being lesbian BLACK - For women and children
who have been gang raped
An address delivered before the
National American Women's Suffrage Association at the Columbia Theater,
Washington, D.C., February 18, 1898, on the occasion of its Fiftieth
Anniversary. MRS. MARY CHURCH TERRELL. President of the National
Association of Colored Women. The Progress of Colored
Women Fifty years ago a meeting such as this, planned, conducted
and addressed by women would have been an impossibility. Less than forty
years ago, few sane men would have predicted that either a slave or one of
his descendants would in this century at least, address such an audience
in the Nation's Capital at the invitation of women representing the
highest, broadest, best type of womanhood, that can be found anywhere in
the world. Thus to me this semi-centennial of the National American Woman
Suffrage Association is a double jubilee, rejoicing as I do, not only in
the prospective enfranchisement of my sex but in the emancipation of my
race. When Ernestine Rose, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy
Stone and Susan B. Anthony began that agitation by which colleges were
opened to women and the numerous reforms inaugurated for the amelioration
of their condition along all lines, their sisters who groaned in bondage
had little reason to hope that these blessings would ever brighten their
crushed and blighted lives, for during those days of oppression and
despair, colored women were not only refused admittance to institutions of
learning, but the law of the States in which the majority lived made it a
crime to teach them to read. Not only could they possess no property, but
even their bodies were not their own. Nothing, in short, that could
degrade or brutalize the womanhood of the race was lacking in that system
from which colored women then had little hope of escape. So gloomy were
their prospects, so fatal the laws, so pernicious the customs, only fifty
years ago. But, from the day their fetters were broken and their minds
released from the darkness of ignorance to which for more than two hundred
years they had been doomed, from the day they could stand erect in the
dignity of womanhood, no longer bond but free, till tonight, colored women
have forged steadily ahead in the acquisition of knowledge and in the
cultivation of those virtues which make for good. To use a thought of the
illustrious Frederick Douglass, if judged by the depths from which they
have come, rather than by the heights to which those blessed with
centuries of opportunities have attained, colored women need not hang
their heads in shame. Consider if you will, the almost insurmountable
obstacles which have confronted colored women in their efforts to educate
and cultivate themselves since their emancipation, and I dare assert, not
boastfully, but with pardonable pride, I hope, that the progress they have
made and the work they have accomplished, will bear a favorable comparison
at least with that of their more fortunate sisters, from the opportunity
of acquiring knowledge and the means of self-culture have never been
entirely withheld. For, not only are colored women with ambition and
aspiration handicapped on account of their sex, but they are everywhere
baffled and mocked on account of their race. Desperately and continuously
they are forced to fight that opposition, born of a cruel, unreasonable
prejudice which neither their merit nor their necessity seems able to
subdue. Not only because they are women, but because they are colored
women, are discouragement and disappointment meeting them at every turn.
Avocations opened and opportunities offered to their more favored sisters
have been and are tonight closed and barred against them. While those of
the dominant race have a variety of trades and pursuits from which they
may choose, the woman through whose veins one drop of African blood is
known to flow is limited to a pitiful few. So overcrowded are the
avocations in which colored women may engage and so poor is the pay in
consequence, that only the barest livelihood can be eked out by the rank
and file. And yet, in spite of the opposition encountered, the obstacles
opposed to their acquisition of knowledge and their accumulation of
property, the progress made by colored women along these lines has never
been surpassed by that of any people in the history of the world. Though
the slaves were liberated less than forty years ago, penniless, and
ignorant, with neither shelter nor food, so great was their thirst for
knowledge and so herculean were their efforts to secure it, that there are
today hundreds of negroes, many of them women, who are graduates, some of
them having taken degrees from the best institutions of the land. From
Oberlin, that friend of the oppressed, Oberlin, my dear alma mater, whose
name will always be loved and whose praise will ever be sung as the first
college in the country which was just, broad and benevolent enough to open
its doors to negroes and to women on an equal footing with men; from
Wellesley and Vassar, from Cornell and Ann Arbor, from the best high
schools throughout the North, East and West, Colored girls have been
graduated with honors, and have thus forever settled the question of their
capacity and worth. But a few years ago in an examination in which a large
number of young women and men competed for a scholarship, entitling the
successful competitor to an entire course through the Chicago University,
the only colored girl among them stood first and captured this great
prize. And so, wherever colored girls have studied, their instructors bear
testimony to their intelligence, diligence and success. With this
increase of wisdom there has sprung up in the hearts of colored women an
ardent desire to do good in the world. No sooner had the favored few
availed themselves of such advantages as they could secure than they
hastened to dispense these blessings to the less fortunate of their race.
With tireless energy and eager zeal, colored women have, since their
emancipation, been continuously prosecuting the work of educating and
elevating their race, as though upon themselves alone devolved the
accomplishment of this great task. Of the teachers engaged in instructing
colored youth, it is perhaps no exaggeration to say that fully ninety per
cent are women. In the back-woods, remote from the civilization and
comforts of the city and town, on the plantations reeking with ignorance
and vice, our colored women may be found battling with evils which such
conditions always entail. Many a heroine, of whom the world will never
hear, has thus sacrificed her life to her to her race, amid surroundings
and in the face of privations which only martyrs can tolerate and bear.
Shirking responsibility has never been a fault with which colored women
might be truthfully charged. Indefatigably and conscientiously, in public
work of all kinds they engage, that they may benefit and elevate their
race. The result of this labor has been prodigious indeed. By banding
themselves together in the interest of education and morality, by adopting
the most practical and useful means to this end, colored women have in
thirty short years become a great power for good. Through the National
Association of Colored Women, which was formed by the union of two large
organizations in July, 1896, and which is now the only national body among
colored women, much good has been done in the past, and more will be
accomplished in the future, we hope. Believing that it is only through the
home that a people can become really good and truly great, the National
Association of Colored Women has entered that sacred domain. Homes, more
homes, better homes, purer homes is the text upon which our have been and
will be preached. Through mothers' meetings, which are a special feature
of the work planned by the Association, much useful information in
everything pertaining to the home will be disseminated. We would have
heart-to-heart talks with our women, that we may strike at the root of
evils, many of which lie, alas, at the fireside. If the women of the
dominant race with all the centuries of education, culture and refinement
back of them, with all their wealth of opportunity ever present with
them--if these women feel the need of a Mothers' Congress that they may be
enlightened as to the best methods of rearing children and conducting
their homes, how much more do our women, from whom shackles have but
yesterday fallen, need information on the same vital subjects? And so
throughout the country we are working vigorously and conscientiously to
establish Mothers' Congresses in every community in which our women may be
found. Under the direction of the Tuskegee, Alabama branch of the
National Association, the work of bringing the light of knowledge and the
gospel of cleanliness to their benighted sisters on the plantations has
been conducted with signal success. Their efforts have thus far been
confined to four estates, comprising thousand of acres of land, on which
live hundreds of colored people, yet in the darkness of ignorance and the
grip of sin, miles away from churches and schools. Under the evil
influences of plantation owners, and through no fault of their own, the
condition of the colored people is, in some sections to-day no better than
it was at the close of the war. Feeling the great responsibility resting
upon them, therefore, colored women, both in organizations under the
National Association, and as individuals are working with might and main
to afford their unfortunate sisters opportunities of civilization and
education, which without them, they would be unable to secure. By the
Tuskegee club and many others all over the country, object lessons are
given in the best way to sweep, dust, cook, wash and iron, together with
other information concerning household affairs. Talks on social purity and
the proper method of rearing children are made for the benefit of those
mothers, who in many instances fall short of their duty, not because they
are vicious and depraved, but because they are ignorant and poor. Against
the one-room cabin so common in the rural settlements in the South, we
have inaugurated a vigorous crusade. When families of eight eight or ten,
consisting of men, women and children, are all huddled together in a
single apartment, a condition of things found not only in the South, but
among our poor all over the land, there is little hope of inculcating
morality or modesty. And yet, in spite of these environments which are so
destructive of virtue, and though the safeguards usually thrown around
maidenly youth and innocence are in some sections withheld from colored
girls, statistics compiled by men, not inclined to falsify in favor of my
race, show that immorality among colored women is not so great as among
women in countries like Austria, Italy, Germany, Sweden and France. In
New York City a mission has been established and is entirely supported by
colored women under supervision of the New York City Board. It has in
operation a kindergarten, classes in cooking and sewing, mothers'
meetings, mens' meetings, a reading circle and a manual training school
for boys. Much the same kind of work is done by the Colored Woman's League
and the Ladies Auxiliary of this city, the Kansas City League of Missouri,
the Woman's Era Club of Boston, the Woman's Loyal Union of New York, and
other organizations representing almost every State in the Union. The
Phyllis Wheatley Club of New Orleans, another daughter of the National
Association, has in two short years succeeded in establishing a Sanatorium
and a Training School for nurses. The conditions which caused the colored
women of New Orleans to choose this special field in which to operate are
such as exist in many other sections of our land. From the city hospitals
colored doctors are excluded altogether, not even being allowed to
practice in the colored wards and colored patients--no matter how wealthy
they are--are not received at all, unless they are willing to go into the
charity wards. Thus the establishment of a Sanatorium answers a variety of
purposes. It affords colored medical students an opportunity of gaining a
practical knowledge of their profession, and it furnishes a well-equipped
establishment for colored patients who do not care to go into the charity
wards of the public hospitals. The daily clinics have been a great
blessing to the colored poor. In the operating department, supplied with
all the modern appliances, two hundred operations have been performed, all
of which have resulted successfully under the colored surgeon-in-chief. Of
the eight nurses who have registered, one has already passed an
examination before the State Medical Board of Louisiana, and is now
practicing her profession. During the yellow fever epidemic in New Orleans
last summer, there was a constant demand for Phyllis Wheatley nurses. By
indefatigable energy and heroic sacrifice of both money and time, these
noble women raised nearly one thousand dollars, with which to defray the
expenses of the Sanatorium for the first eight months of its existence.
They have recently succeeded in securing from the city of New Orleans an
annual appropriation of two hundred and forty dollars, which they hope
will soon be increased. Dotted all over the country are charitable
organizations for the aged, orphaned and poor, which have been established
by colored women; just how many, it is difficult to state. Since there is
such an imperative need of statistics, bearing on the progress,
possessions, and prowess of colored women, the National Association has
undertaken to secure this data of such value and importance to the race.
Among the charitable institutions, either founded, conducted or supported
by colored women, may be mentioned the Hale Infirmary of Montgomery,
Alabama; the Carrie Steel Orphanage of Atlanta; the Reed Orphan Home of
Covington; the Haines Industrial School of Augusta in the State of
Georgia; a Home for the Aged of both races at New Bedford and St. Monica's
Home of Boston in Massachusetts; Old Folks' Home of Memphis, Tenn; colored
Orphan's Home, Lexington, Ky., together with others of which time forbids
me to speak. Mt. Meigs Institute is an excellent example of a work
originated and carried into successful execution by a colored woman. The
school was established for the benefit of colored people on the
plantations in the black belt of Alabama, because of the 700,000 negroes
living in that State,probably 90 per cent are outside of the cities; and
Waugh was selected because in the township of Mt. Meigs, the population is
practically all colored. Instruction given in this school is of the kind
best suited to the needs of those people for whom it was established.
Along with their scholastic training, girls are taught everything
pertaining to the management of a home, while boys learn practical
farming, carpentering, wheel-wrighting, blacksmithing, and have some
military training. Having started with almost nothing, only eight years
ago, the trustees of the school now own nine acres of land, and five
buildings, in which two thousand pupils have received instruction--all
through the courage the industry and sacrifice of one good woman. The
Chicago clubs and several others engage in rescue work among fallen women
and tempted girls. Questions affecting or legal status as a race are
also constantly agitated by our women. In Louisiana and Tennessee, colored
women have several times petitioned the legislatures of their respective
States to repeal the obnoxious "Jim Crow Car" laws, nor will any stone be
left unturned until this iniquitous and unjust enactment against
respectable American citizens be forever wiped from the statutes of the
South. Against the barbarous Convict Lease System of Georgia, of which
negroes, especially the female prisoners, are the principal victims,
colored women are waging a ceaseless war. By two lecturers, each of whom,
under the Woman's Christian Temperance Union has been National
Superintendent of work among colored people, the cause of temperance has
for many years been eloquently espoused. In business, colored women
have had signal success. There is in Alabama a large milling and cotton
business belonging to and controlled entirely by a colored woman who has
sometimes as many as seventy-five men in her employ. In Halifax, Nova
Scotia, the principal ice plant of the city is owned and managed by one of
our women. In the professions we have dentists and doctors, whose practice
is lucrative and large. Ever since the publication, in 1773, of a book
entitled "Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral," by Phyllis
Wheatley, negro servant of Mr John Wheatley of Boston, colored women have
from time to time given abundant evidence of literary ability. In
sculpture we are represented by a woman upon whose chisel Italy has set
her seal of approval; in painting, by Bougerean's pupil, whose work was
exhibited in the last Paris Salon, and in Music by young women holding
diplomas from the first conservatories in the land. And, finally, as
an organization of women nothing lies nearer the heart of the National
Association than the children, many of whose lives, so sad and dark, we
might brighten and bless. It is the kindergarten we need. Free
kindergartens in every city and hamlet of this broad land we must have, if
the children are to receive from us what it is our duty to give. Already
during the past year kindergartens have been established and successfully
maintained by several organizations, from which most encouraging reports
have come. May their worthy example be emulated, till in no branch of the
Association shall the children of the poor, at least, be deprived of the
blessings which flow from the kindergarten alone. The more unfavorable the
environments of children, the more necessary is it that steps be taken to
counteract baleful influences on innocent victims. How imperative is it
then that as colored women, we inculcate correct principles and set good
examples for our own youth, whose little feet will have so many thorny
paths of prejudice temptation, and injustice to tread. The colored youth
is vicious we are told, and statistics showing the multitudes of our boys
and girls who crowd the penetentiaries and fill the jails appall and
dishearten us. But side by side with these facts and figures of crime I
would have presented and pictured the miserable hovels from which these
youth criminals come. Make a tour of the settlements of colored people,
who in many cities are relegated to the most noisome sections permitted by
the municipal government, and behold the mites of humanity who infest
them. Here are our little ones, the future representatives of the race,
fairly drinking in the pernicious example of their elders, coming in
contact with nothing but ignorance and vice, till at the age of six, evil
habits are formed which no amount of civilizing or Christianizing can ever
completely break. Listen to the cry of our children. In imitation of the
example set by the Great Teacher of men, who could not offer himself as a
sacrifice, until he had made an eternal plea for the innocence and
helplessness of childhood, colored women are everywhere reaching out after
the waifs and strays, who without their aid may be doomed to lives of evil
and shame. As an organization, the National Association of Colored Women
feels that the establishment of kindergartens is the special mission which
we are called to fulfill. So keenly alive are we to the necessity of
rescuing our little ones, whose noble qualities are deadened and dwarfed
by the very atmosphere which they breathe, that the officers of the
Association are now trying to secure means by which to send out a
kindergarten organizer, whose duty it shall be both to arouse the
conscience of our women, and to establish kindergartens, wherever the
means therefore can be secured. And so, lifting as we climb, onward
and upward we go, struggling and striving, and hoping that the buds and
blossoms of our desires will burst into glorious fruition ere long. With
courage, born of success achieved in the past, with a keen sense of the
responsibility which we shall continue to assume, we look forward to a
future large with promise and hope. Seeking no favors because of our
color, nor patronage because of our needs, we knock at the bar of justice,
asking an equal chance. Among the speakers of the Convention were Susan
B. Anthony, Isabella Beecher Hooker, Rev. Anna Shaw, Lillie Deverux, Mary
Wright Sewell, and Carrie Chapman Catt.
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