Toward a Tenderer Humanity and a Nobler Womanhood: African American Women's Clubs in Turn-Of-The-Century Chicago

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NYU Press, 1996 - 209 pages

During the Progressive Era, over 150 African American women's clubs flourished in Chicago. Through these clubs, women created a vibrant social world of their own, seeking to achieve social and political uplift by educating themselves and the members of their communities. In politics, they battled legal discrimination, advocated anti-lynching laws, and fought for suffrage. In the tradition of other mothering, in which the the community shares in the care and raising of all its children, the club women established kindergartens, youth clubs, and homes for the elderly.
In Toward a Tenderer Humanity and a Nobler Womanhood, Anne Meis Knupfer documents how the club women created multiple allegiances through social and club networks and sheds light on the life experiences of African American women in urban centers throughout the country. Drawing upon the primary documents of African American newspapers, journals, and speeches of the time, this book chronicles and analyzes the complexity and richness of the African American club women's lives as they lifted while others climbed.

 

Contents

ONE AFRICAN AMERICAN CLUB WOMENS
11
TWO AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITIES IN CHICAGO
30
THREE THE WOMENS CLUBS AND POLITICAL REFORM
46
FIVE AFRICAN AMERICAN SETTLEMENTS
90
viii
108
SEVEN SOCIAL CLUBS
123
CONCLUSION
135
APPENDIX BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF PROMINENT
144
Notes
159
Bibliography
187
Index
205
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About the author (1996)

Anne Meis Knupfer is Visiting Assistant Professor of Educational Studies at Purdue University.

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