Ruth Ellis
Name: Ruth
Charlotte Ellis
Sunrise: July 23, 1899
Sunset: October 2001
Courtesy of the
Lesbian History Project
"My life has been nothing special. I am a quiet person who
came from a very ordinary, middle-class Negro family. I was born
July 23, 1899 in Springfield, Illinois...After high school in
Springfield, a neighborhood man taught me how to set type and
run his presses...I had one real girlfriend. Her name was
Ceciline. We called her Babe. She was the only person I ever
lived with...We lived together for 30 years...When I decided to
have a [print] shop of my own, my girlfriend and I bought a
home...Our house was noted for being a 'gay spot.' There weren't
very many places in Detroit you could go back in 1937,
1940...people used to come from every place... Babe died in
1973...I love to dance, bowl and go to classical music recitals.
I have so many young friends who treat me wonderfully...I'm
having a lot of fun!..."
(From interview with Miss
Ruth by Terri Jewell, in Piece of My Heart).
[Read
More]
The Gay community's love affair with Ellis began
when she was around 80. It started when this elderly black woman
slipped a note to Jaye Spiro, a white female who once taught
self-defense classes and karate to residents of the senior
citizens center where Ellis then lived.
Ellis said she thought Spiro was Gay. So in the note, she
asked whether they could get better acquainted. Spiro responded
by visiting Ellis and then introducing her to Lesbians in other
karate classes she taught.
"Those girls took me to all the bars, and it just snowballed
after that," Ellis said. "Word got around, and I was going every
place."
Ellis, who was born in Springfield, Ill., on July 23, 1899.
(From 100 years young -- Ruth Ellis brings the celebration
of a century to D.C. Black Pride by Rhonda Smith)
Ruth
Ellis' Tale of Two Cities:
One Hundred Years In The Making -- by
Keith Boykin
Some time after eight on the morning of July
21, 1899, Dr. Clarence Hemingway walked out to his front porch
at what was then 439 Oak Park Avenue in Oak Park, Illinois. He
lifted up his cornet, fingered the valves, placed his lips on
the mouthpiece, and began blowing music to announce the birth of
his first son Ernest.
Only forty-eight hours later, one hundred ninety-three miles
southwest in Springfield, Illinois, thirty-eight year old
Charles Ellis and thirty-four year old Carrie Faro Ellis gave
birth to their first daughter Ruth. It's hard to imagine how the
lives of Ernest Hemingway and Ruth Ellis could be more opposite.
Hemingway - White, male, and heterosexual - the son of
a doctor, was born into a prominent family. Ellis, on the other
hand - Black, female, and homosexual - was born to parents of
modest means, although her father held the distinction of
serving as Springfield's first Black mail carrier.
[more]
Ruth Ellis Continues to Fight Racism
a snapshot of the oldest living Afro-American lesbian, her
falling in and out of love, and how she lives today with her
circle of friends
by Gloria Melencio
By the time Ruth Charlotte Ellis celebrated her 101st birthday
last 23 July, she had become the oldest living "out" Black
feminist in the history, rather herstory, of the women's
movement. Those 101 years had been spent working, fighting,
dancing, laughing, and loving. Could a woman ask for more?
Born in 1899 in Illinois, USA, Ruth was the youngest of four
children and the only girl. Her mother died when she was very
young. Her father, the first Coloured mail courier in the state,
sent all of his children to school. Ruth's brothers play the
piano, violin and the guitar. She likewise plays the guitar and
excels in dancing.
Ruthie, as she signs her name in her personal letters, says her
being Black has caused her a lot of pain, struggles and
troubles. The turn of the 20th century was one of the most
turbulent times in American history, and she witnessed how
Blacks were hated, maimed, lynched and killed because of the
colour of their skin.
Her childhood was filled with memories of discrimination and
racial segregation. Blacks were denied entry to theatres, except
for one opera house who let them in, but only on condition that
they stayed in the farthest gallery. "The children called it
peanut heaven," she chuckles. All the good eating places refused
to accept Black customers, she continues, and the only one where
they could go was a short-order restaurant— "but it served only
chili!"
Ruth went to a mixed school where the Coloured pupils did not
have the opportunities that the White children had. Denied
participation in any team activities, they could only look on
with envy during baseball, football or swimming practice. Black
children had to go to the Sangamon River, a dangerous place
where some of them had already drowned, to enjoy playing in the
water. She herself, like many of her friends, never learned to
swim or engage in other sports because of segregation.
[Read More]
Ruth Ellis: The Oldest "Out" Lesbian Known
by Yvonne Welbon
The first time I laid eyes on Ruth C. Ellis she was dancing. I
was at the 1997 National Women's Music Festival women of color
dance. When my girlfriend and I had to pause for water and
rest, Ruth did not. I wondered how old she was. I later learned
that Ruth C. Ellis was 97 years old.
Born July 23, 1899, in Springfield, Illinois, Ruth C. Ellis is
the oldest "out" African American lesbian I know. When I met
her, I was indeed intrigued. I wanted to know everything about
her. I could not begin to image the almost one-hundred
years of history that was living in the 4'8" tall woman that
everyone calls Ruth.
[Read More]
Source:
http://www-lib.usc.edu/~retter/ruthmain.html
Lesbian History Project:
http://isd.usc.edu/~retter/main.html
http://www.blackstripe.com/archives/blacklist/rellis/rellis.html
http://www.isiswomen.org/wia/wia100/hum00017.html
http://www.npr.org/programs/morning/100years.html
(Real Audio)
http://www.thirdcoastfestival.org/pages/archive.html
Conversation With Ruth Ellis (Keith Boykin): http://www.keithboykin.com/author/ruth3.html
Sisters In The Life:
http://www.sistersinthelife.com/1024index.html
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