Advance Publication: Katey Harrington, Black History Month Reflections

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The Enduring Contribution of Black Women to United States Politics By Katey Meza Harrington Advance Publication. This article will appear in the March 2022 issue of NASW-NJ FOCUS. Throughout the course of America’s history, Black women have made sacrifices to better our nation. Their achievements, however, can come at a cost. Sometimes it’s being forgotten by history books, or not living long enough to enjoy the opportunities they create. This drive for liberation should come as no surprise—for them the political is personal. It is their children being harassed, killed, and held unjustly; their education hindered; and their votes not counted. Long before it was a term, Black women demonstrated an intersectional 1 approach to social justice. Dr. Hettie V. Williams, professor of African American history at Monmouth University, points out Black women were progressive intellectuals influencing politics long before they were allowed scholarship 2. They do this by making what may initially seem as Black women’s issues into American issues. Maria W. Stewart was a feminist and abolitionist known as the first woman to address a mixed audience of men and women. In the 1830s she used the church to present the moral outrages of slavery to the New England Anti-Slavery Society, calling for women’s voices to be as loud as men’s 3. Using the Christian bible to demonstrate America’s deviation from righteousness, Stewart was one of the earliest Black leaders of the church movement to end oppression. Despite the feat of being published in 1832 under her own name, her legacy is relatively unknown. Mary McLeod Bethune4 was educated during the Reconstruction era and believed education was the path to upward mobility for African Americans in the 1890s. Trained as a missionary, she could not find a post that would accept her. So, she founded schools for Black girls, created the National Council of Negro Women, had a leadership role with the NAACP, and was consulted by Presidents Coolidge and Hoover on issues of child welfare. She became an advisor to Eleanor Roosevelt and was appointed director of Negro Affairs by President Roosevelt. She pushed President Truman to allow women to fight during WWII. While 1

Kimberlé Crenshaw https://youtu.be/sWP92i7JLlQ

2

https://newbooksnetwork.com/hettie-v-williams-bury-my-heart-in-a-free-land-black-women-intellectualsin-modern-u-s-history-praeger-2018/ minute 8:14 3

https://www.thoughtco.com/maria-stewart-biography-3530406

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https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/mary-mcleod-bethune


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