The Phillis Wheatley Clubs (also Phyllis Wheatley Club) are women's clubs created by African Americans starting in the late 1800s. The first club was founded in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1895. Some clubs are still active. The purpose of Phillis Wheatley Clubs varied from area to area, although most were involved in community and personal improvement. Some clubs helped in desegregation and voting rights efforts. The clubs were named after the poet Phillis Wheatley.
About
Phillis Wheatley Clubs worked on improving their neighborhoods and the lives of people in their communities.[1] Clubs were also involved in social reform.[2] In New Orleans, the Phyllis Wheatley Club founded the only training hospital for black doctors and nurses in 1896.[3] The hospital was originally named the Phyllis Wheatley Sanitarium and Training Hospital for Nurses.[3]
The Chicago club was founded in 1896 by a group of Black women led by Elizabeth Lindsay Davis, and created a home for young women without permanent housing.[4][5] It was the first Black women's club formed in Chicago,[5] and was supported by Mary Jane Richardson Jones, a prominent older black activist and wealthy widow.[6][7] The first Phyllis Wheatley Home, located on Chicago's South Side, was purchased for $3,400 in 1906, and Jennie Lawrence was hired to oversee it.[5] It opened in 1908, and served as a settlement house, providing accommodations to Black women during the Great Migration.[5][8] It moved into a larger building in 1913, before moving to its final location on South Michigan Avenue in the mid-1920s.[8][5] It remained open until the 1970s.[5] The first two locations have been demolished, while a hearing in demolition court is scheduled for its final location on March 16, 2021.[5] However, its owner is hoping to restore the building and create a public exhibit space on Black women's history.[8]Preservation Chicago listed the last Chicago Phyllis Wheatley Club and Home as one of Chicago's 7 most endangered buildings in February 2021.[5][9]
The New Orleans club, which was founded by Sylvanie Francoz Williams, also opened a kindergarten and day care for working women and the club was also involved in black women's suffrage.[10] The club in Nashville, Tennessee purchased a home for older women in 1925.[11] The Billings, Montana club was instrumental in helping desegregate the city.[12] The Billings club also sponsored scholarships for young women.[12] Clubs, such as the Phyllis Wheatley Progressive Club in Pennsylvania, opened a night school in the late 1920s.[13]
To pay for charity work and other endeavors, the clubs held fundraisers. These could be in the form of balls or dances, or theater and musical receptions.[22][23] In Tampa Bay, the Phyllis Wheatley Club sponsored an annual "Defense Dance" which raised money by charging a fee at the door.[24] Fundraising could go towards other non-profit groups, such as the NAACP.[20]
Clubs could be affiliated with the YWCA or worked independently.[25] The first club, started in Nashville, became affiliated with the National Federation of Colored Women's Clubs (NFCWC) in 1897.[11] Other clubs, such as the Fort Worth Phyllis Wheatley Club, were also affiliated with the NFCWC.[26]
Early club members were normally professional women or married to "prominent men in the community."[14] However, some Phillis Wheatley Clubs were made up of younger members.[27] Other clubs had members of many different demographics.[12][21] Clubs were named for the poet, Phillis Wheatley.[20] Many clubs have been and are still active into the 21st century. The El Paso, Texas Phillis Wheatley Club celebrated its 90th anniversary in 2005.[28]
The Newark, New Jersey Phillis Wheatley Club was founded in 1909 with a focus on literature.[32]Musette Brooks Gregory, a suffragist and civil rights advocate, served as one of the elected presidents of the Newark Club.[33]
1910s
In Cleveland, Jane Edna Hunter founded a group in 1911 that was later renamed the Phillis Wheatley Association.[34][35] The El Paso, Texas Phillis Wheatley Club was started in 1915.[28] Charleston, South Carolina started a club in 1916 which was named the Phillis Wheatley Literary and Social Club.[36] Another club was founded in 1918 in Billings, Montana, and the first president was Mattie Hambright.[12] The Billings club would continue until 1972.[12] Dora Bell started a club in Racine, Wisconsin in 1919.[37] The Fort Scott, Kansas club was started in 1919 to "study current topics, civics and economics."[38]
1930s
In 1932, a club in Passaic, New Jersey, worked to raise $5,000 for the creation of a black community center.[39] The Coshocton, Ohio, club was started in 1933 a few months just before the 159th anniversary of the publication of Poems by Wheatley.[21] The Coshocton club was affiliated with the YWCA and started by Thelma Crowthers.[21]
^Guzman, Richard (2006). Black writing from Chicago : in the world, not of it?. Carolyn M. Rodgers. Southern Illinois University Press. p. 3. ISBN0-8093-2703-1. OCLC62324505.
^Hendricks, Wanda A. (2013). Fannie Barrier Williams: Crossing the Borders of Region and Race. University of Illinois Press. ISBN978-0-252-09587-0. OCLC1067196558.
^"Talbert timeline". African American History of Western New York. Retrieved May 31, 2019.
Sources
Knupfer, Anne Meis (Spring 1997). "'If You Can't Push, Pull, If You Can't Pull, Please Get Out of the Way': The Phyllis Wheatley Club and Home in Chicago, 1896 to 1920". The Journal of Negro History. 82 (2): 221–231. doi:10.2307/2717517. ISSN0022-2992. JSTOR2717517. S2CID140411339.