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Who Is She?
Anna Julia Cooper (1858-1964)
"Only the BLACK WOMAN can say 'when and where
I enter, in the quiet, undisputed dignity of my womanhood,
without violence and without suing or special patronage,then and
there the whole . . . race enters with me'"
-- Anna Julia Cooper
"Not the boys less, but the girls more,"
wrote Anna J. Cooper in her collection of writings and essays,
A Voice from the South by a Black Woman of the South
(1892). Marked by an unusual maturity and mental aptitude,
Cooper said that "not far from … kindergarten age" she
had decided to be a teacher. Her early and unbridled
passion for learning, and her belief that women were well
equipped to follow intellectual pursuits, carried Cooper from
the then-ungraded St. Augustine's Normal School and Collegiate
Institute in Raleigh, North Carolina, to the Sorbonne in Paris.
During this more than fifty-year sojourn in pursuit of her
dream, she also earned B.A. (1884) and M.A. (1887) degrees from
Oberlin College, was principal of the M Street High School in
Washington, D.C. (1902–06), and, in 1929, became the second
president of Frelinghuysen University, in Washington, D.C.
Best known as an educator, Cooper also was a feminist, human
rights advocate, distinguished scholar, essayist, author,
lecturer, and vital force in the late nineteenth-century black
woman's club movement.
The daughter of a slave woman, Hannah Stanley, and her master,
George Washington Haywood of Raleigh, Cooper was born Annie
Julia Haywood on August 10, 1858. Hired out as a nursemaid for
Charles Busbee (later a successful lawyer), Hannah named the
infant girl for Charles's mother. No one in her own home was
literate, so probably it was in the Busbee home that young
Annie's love for books and learning blossomed. Years later,
however, as president of Frelinghuysen, Cooper touchingly
honored her mother by naming one small department of the
struggling institution the Hannah Stanley Opportunity School. As
Cooper wrote about her mother, "mother … sacrificed and
toiled to give me advantages that she had never enjoyed herself."
Of her father, Cooper later wrote that beyond the act of
procreation she owed him nothing.
Cooper entered St. Augustine's in 1867. There she coached or
tutored other students, some of whom were years beyond her
tender age of nine. About a decade later, when she protested the
exclusion of young women from higher courses scheduled only for
ministerial studies and, therefore, only for men, Cooper met her
future husband. From Nassau, British West Indies, George A. C.
Cooper was an Episcopal theology student and St. Augustine's new
Greek teacher.
Although George was nearly fourteen years her senior, teacher
and pupil developed a friendship, which later grew into love.
They were married on June 21, 1877. With shared career goals,
the couple worked tirelessly to achieve them during the two
years they were married. George died on September 27, 1879, just
two months after becoming the second black ordained clergyman in
the Protestant Episcopal Church in North Carolina.
At the age of twenty-one, Cooper was alone. Not one to complain
about adversities, the young widow stoically continued on in the
pursuit of her goals. Denied a modest increase in her
thirty-dollar-a-month teaching salary, she left St. Augustine's
in the fall of 1881 to travel to Oberlin, Ohio. The previous
summer she had written to James Harris Fairchild, president of
Oberlin College, saying "for a long time, I earnestly desired to
take an advanced course in some superior Northern college, but
could not … for lack of means."
Given Oberlin's enviable reputation for liberal thought and
superior scholarship, Cooper believed that admission to Oberlin
would be an important step in her long quest for higher
education. Unlike most young women students of the time,
Cooper—along with Mary Eliza Church (Terrell) and Ida A. Gibbs
(Hunt)—took the four-year "gentlemen's course." The trio
graduated from Oberlin in 1884, following Mary Jane Patterson
(1862) as the first black women to complete a four-year course
of study from an accredited American college.
While at Oberlin, Cooper began to see herself as a defender of
her race and an advocate for black women. Personal successes and
achievements to one side, she remained sensitive to the plight
and needs of oppressed peoples, and was encouraged to be a free
thinker and the voice of unheard southern black women. Her
interaction with faculty members and peers, whose sound
scholarship and intelligence reinforced her own views, helped
Cooper prepare for her lifelong work. The first member of her
family to go beyond the primary grades, Cooper left Oberlin
eager to serve those who were unserved. Confident, poised,
self-assured, and armed with an A.B., she felt ready to address
the inequities and indignities that black women like her mother
had experienced in slavery and in the post–Civil War South.
Cooper postponed for a year her planned return to Raleigh in
order to teach at Wilberforce College in Ohio. As a devout and
lifelong Episcopalian, Cooper had many contacts in the national
black church community. At Wilberforce she met Bishop Benjamin
W. Arnett, a noted cleric of the African Methodist Episcopal (AME)
Church. Cooper admired Arnett for his support of the cause of
black women, and Arnett later wrote a favorable introduction to
A Voice from the South.
Also among her supporters were clergymen Alexander Crummell,
Francis J. Grimké, and Walter H. Brooks. Later she befriended
Alexander Walters, a bishop in the AME Zion Church and head of
the National Negro-American Political League. All social
activists, these men worked to help those who, in Cooper's
words, "were stuck at the bottom." In each of them she found a
brother's sympathy for the difficult and adverse situation of
black women.
As in her life experiences, Cooper forthrightly addressed
critical issues in her writings. Not given to expediency or
vagueness, she never avoided tough situations or difficult
decisions. She used cogent arguments to persuade others of the
importance and correctness of the causes she embraced. Although
some people found her to be difficult, intractable, and blunt,
St. Augustine's principal, John E. C. Smedes, described her in
1881 as "a woman of unusual culture and intelligence, and of
unfeigned zeal and piety." Cooper, he said, had decided to "be
better qualified to take part in the great work going forward in
the South for the … education of its colored people."
After a year as head of the modern languages department at
Wilberforce, Cooper returned to Raleigh to deal with urgent
family matters. (In 1880–81, she had purchased a modest dwelling
for her mother from Richard Battle, a member of the prominent
Haywood clan.) For the next two years Cooper taught mathematics,
Greek, and Latin at St. Augustine's, began outreach extension
programs under the school's aegis, and helped found a Sunday
school and a mission guild. As a member of the North Carolina
Teacher's Association, she involved herself with critical
education
issues, and in signing the group's report to the state
legislature, she was very outspoken about the failure of
lawmakers to appropriate "reasonable and just provisions for the
training of … colored youth."
In 1887, Washington, D.C.'s first black Superintendent of
Colored Schools, inspired by high praise from people at Oberlin,
invited Cooper to join the faculty of M Street (now Paul
Laurence Dunbar) High School. Not completely unknown in
Washington, Cooper boarded with the Rev. Alexander Crummell and
his wife. Already living with the Crummells were Oberlin
graduates Mary Jane Patterson, also from Raleigh, and her sister
Channie; Mary Eliza Church (Terrell); Ida Gibbs (Hunt); and,
later, Gibbs's sister, Harriet Gibbs Marshall. Cooper quickly
joined with them and others in order to work for social
progress, allying herself with groups that addressed issues
important to the national black community. Battles won in
Washington often had broad implications for black Americans
across the nation, and Cooper worked unstintingly to present a
more positive image of her race.
The decade of the 1890s was an important period in the fostering
of black intellectual and political thought. In the vanguard of
the struggle for human rights, Cooper and the groups with whom
she was associated promoted opportunities for academic
excellence for black youth; built groups and clubs of learning
and culture for black women; defended the honor of, and demanded
respect for, the reputations and views of black people; and
effectively articulated their needs, hopes, and aspirations. To
these efforts Cooper and her colleagues brought more than a
half-century of commitment to, and activism in, antislavery
groups, abolitionist societies, women's rights groups, literary
and self-improvement clubs, and benevolent organizations. Some,
like Cooper, had published and lectured on circuits such as
Chautauqua. Known for her learning, modesty, and culture, Cooper
herself was recognized as an "inspiring lecturer and leader."
As spokeswomen for their race, Anna Cooper, Fannie Barrier
Williams, and Fanny Jackson Coppin were invited in 1893 to
address a special meeting of the Women's Congress in Chicago.
This international gathering of women was held to coincide with
the World's Columbian Exposition, in order to ensure a large
audience and wide press coverage. A special session addressing
the theme "The Intellectual Progress of Colored Women of the
United States since Emancipation" was held to give black women a
hearing before an international body of white women. Cooper's
thesis was a subject she often addressed, "The Needs and
Status of black Women." A platform guest who was deeply
moved by what he had heard, Frederick Douglass, rose to make
impromptu remarks. In closing he said: "When I hear such
speeches … from our women—our women—I feel a sense of gratitude
to Almighty God that I have lived to see what I now see."
Cooper was the only woman elected to membership in the esoteric
American Negro Academy, founded in 1897 by Alexander Crummell.
Among its select members were W. E. B. DuBois, Kelly Miller,
Jesse E. Moorland, Arthur A. Schomburg, and Carter G. Woodson.
This late nineteenth-century black think tank had among its
objectives "the publication of scholarly work and the defense
of the Negro against vicious assault."
At the first Pan-African Conference in London's Westminster Hall
in 1900, Cooper and Anna H. Jones of Missouri were the only two
black women to address the international gathering of African,
Afro-Caribbean, and Afro-American descendants. Cooper's address,
"The Negro Problem in America," was to have been
published in the conference report, but has not been found. An
official U.S. delegate and elected member of the executive
committee, Cooper also served on a committee that drafted a
memorial to Queen Victoria, which also addressed the issue of
apartheid. Concisely and poignantly, the conferees appealed for
immediate relief from "acts of injustice directed against Her
Majesty's subjects in South Africa."
Cooper followed this heady experience with a trip to France to
tour the Paris Exposition. Among egalitarians and black
expatriates, and accompanied by DuBois, Cooper visited the
Social Economy Building's Negro Pavilion, which housed the
Exposition des Nčgres d'Amérique. Mounted by the Library
of Congress and first displayed at M Street High School, the
exhibit featured the black community of Washington, D.C.
Revitalized by her involvement in the Pan-African Conference,
Cooper returned home to her teaching duties. Although she had
been asked to serve on the planning committee for the next
gathering, to be held in Boston in 1902, this conference did not
materialize. The conference's cancellation may have been linked
to monitoring by the U.S. State and War departments of black
activists in Puerto Rico, the Philippines, and Cuba, where a
Negro revolution was rumored to be under way in 1900–01. The
Interior Department's Bureau of Insular Affairs compiled files
(captioned "Negro") about the militancy of black islanders.
These so-called investigations were
followed by a second occupation of Cuba and American
civil-military rule there from 1906 to 1909.
When Robert H. Terrell resigned as principal of M Street High
School on December 31, 1901, to become the District of
Columbia's first black municipal judge, Cooper, who had taught
math and science at the school since 1887, succeeded him,
becoming the second black female principal in the school's
history. Others who had served in the post were Mary Jane
Patterson, Richard T. Greener, Francis L. Cardozo, and Winfield
Scott Montgomery.
Cooper began her new duties on January 2, 1902. At the time, M
Street was the only high school in the nation to offer a diverse
curriculum that prepared black students for either industry or
college, including the Ivy League schools. Under Cooper's
leadership the school became a showcase for the best and
brightest, and Cooper and her faculty used their alumni contacts
to get scholarships for worthy pupils. When Father Felix Klein
of the Catholic Institute of Paris visited the school in 1903
and observed a Latin class being taught by Cooper herself, he
found it incredible that a terrible race problem existed in the
United States. However, Cooper's leadership and the school's
college preparatory work were not to go unchallenged.
The 1904–05 school year was one of turmoil, as allegations of
insubordination and personal impropriety by Cooper, and rumors
of student misconduct, circulated around the city. Cooper was
the fulcrum of what was called "the M Street High School
controversy." Community opinion—whether for or against
her—depended largely on so-called revelations in the local
press. The Washington Post reported in 1905 that the
controversy began with an address to M Street students by W. E.
B. DuBois in the winter of 1902–03. His remark that there was "a
tendency throughout the country to restrict the curriculum of
colored schools" sent shock waves through the city school
system. Cooper's chief antagonist was her supervisor, Percy M.
Hughes, director of Washington's high schools. Despite the
school board's promise to conduct a speedy inquiry, it dragged
through inconclusive evidence for months.
Finally, in October 1906, the board decided not to reappoint
Cooper; school board member Mary Church Terrell, part of the
Oberlin trio, and her husband, Judge Robert H. Terrell, were
silent about the board's reasons and actions. The tendency of
Congress to meddle in the affairs of the District of Columbia
cannot be ignored as a factor in Cooper's dismissal, but some
people suspected the influence of Booker T. Washington and the
so-called Tuskegee machine. Amid the recurring debate over
vocational training (Washington's position) versus classical
education (the position of DuBois), Cooper left Washington,
D.C., proud of M Street's record, now recognized as a creditable
college preparatory high school whose students merited admission
even into Ivy League colleges. Cooper taught at Lincoln
University in Missouri for four years, then returned to
Washington, D.C., to teach Latin again at the school she had
formerly led.
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Anna Julia Cooper, often called
the mother of Black Feminism,
was a teacher dedicated to the
struggle for black liberation
and moral progress. Her work,
A Voice from the South:
By a Black Woman of the South
provided a social analysis of
the plight of black women and
examined race and gender issues
in America. In most of her
writings, she emphasized the
belief that educated black women
would change the world.
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Tough-minded and tenacious, Cooper would meet
new and diverse challenges. She bought a home, made extensive
repairs, and became guardian to five great-nieces and nephews,
aged six months to twelve years. It was a strenuous challenge at
any age, but Cooper, then in her fifties, persevered. In 1911,
while pursuing a Ph.D., she attended summer sessions at "La
Guilde" in Paris. From 1915 to 1917, she attended summer classes
at Columbia University and later took extension courses there.
Sponsored by Father Klein, she applied to the Sorbonne in 1923.
When that school accepted her Columbia credits, she studied for
many hours at the Library of Congress and then traveled to
France to meet dissertation requirements; this, of course, was
before teachers were allowed sabbatical leave.
On March 23, 1925, Cooper became the fourth African-American
woman to earn a Ph.D. (preceded by Georgiana R. Simpson, Eva B.
Dykes, and Sadie T. M. Alexander). Cooper's dissertation, "The
Attitude of France toward Slavery during the Revolution," was
indicative of her broad knowledge, sound scholarship, and
continued interest in pan-Africanism. At the age of sixty-six,
she had completed her journey from slavery to the Sorbonne; her
dream had become a reality. On December 29, 1925, William
Tindall, a D.C. commissioner, awarded her the degree at Howard
University's Rankin Chapel in a ceremony sponsored by the Xi
Omega chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority.
Frelinghuysen University was founded in Washington, D.C., in
1907 by Jesse Lawson. This nontraditional group of schools was
to be a beacon of hope for "colored working people," and
Cooper was installed as its second president on June 15, 1930.
There were serious problems, however. Frelinghuysen had no
permanent building or endowment; tuition alone paid teachers'
stipends; and university trustees seemed unable to overcome old
management disputes.
Recurring exigencies forced Cooper, at great sacrifice, to move
some academic programs into her home at 201 T Street, N.W. She
neither charged rent nor accepted a salary. Instead, she
chartered the Hannah Stanley Opportunity School, which was
annexed to the university but had a self-governing board of
trustees charged to protect the school and Cooper's property
from any threat of dissolution that the university might face. A
1933 codicil to Cooper's will devoted her property "in perpetuo
to [the] Education of Colored Adults."
Frelinghuysen lost its charter in 1937 and no longer awarded
degrees. The Washington, D.C., Board of Education, the only
agency that could independently recognize it as a university,
refused to do so. The university's trustees urged Cooper to make
a public appeal for funds needed in order to upgrade
Frelinghuysen and attract a stronger faculty. Feeling that such
an appeal would be an unfair burden on the very community the
institution was founded to serve, she refused. Instead, at age
seventy-nine, Cooper sought a job with the Works Progress
Administration's Office of Education, but she was not hired. She
then tried to sell her property in Raleigh. The U.S. District
Court upheld the school superintendent's decision not to
accredit Frelinghuysen's law school, a disastrous ruling for the
university. With just a few students enrolled, Cooper remained
in a largely ceremonial role. In about 1940, the university
became the Frelinghuysen Group of Schools for Colored Working
People, and Cooper became its registrar.
The death of her great-niece and namesake, Annie Cooper Haywood
Beckwith, of pneumonia in 1939 hastened Cooper's decline.
Beckwith was six months old in 1915 when Anna Cooper became her
guardian. After refusing to yield to most adversities, she had
rested her hope for Frelinghuysen's future in Annie; now that
hope was gone. Her post-Frelinghuysen endeavors were
anticlimactic. In 1951, she privately published Personal
Recollections of the Grimké Family and the Life and Writings of
Charlotte Forten Grimké. In her book, Cooper told about the
lives of the Grimkés, who were also slave descendants. She lived
many more years—mostly with her memories—and spoke of other
books she wished to write, but her failing health did not permit
her to do so.
Anna J. Cooper was a versatile woman whose cogent ideas and
diversity of thought are best demonstrated in her published
works, lectures, poems, and miscellaneous writings. A consummate
teacher, she ranked high among her peers. She was a feminist and
a stoic activist in the struggle for the betterment of black
people. A much sought-after speaker, she was outspoken on such
subjects as racism, the status of black women, and educational
systems that failed to consider the needs of black and female
students. Continuing to seek solutions to vexing problems, she
addressed diverse themes, including "College Extension for
Working People," "Modern Education," "The Negro Dialect," "A
Problem in American Education: Loss of Speech through
Isolation," and "Legislative Measures Concerning Slavery in the
U.S." Cooper's commitment to education and organizational work
left scant time for her personal life. She did not retire from
her active career as an educator until her eighty-fourth year.
At the age of 105, Cooper died peacefully at her Washington,
D.C., home on Thursday, February 27, 1964. She asked only to be
remembered as "somebody's teacher on vacation … resting for
the Fall opening." After a simple service at St. Augustine's
College Chapel, she was buried in Raleigh, North Carolina, on
Wednesday, March 4, 1964.
By: Louise Daniel Hutchinson
From: Darlene Clark Hine, editor. Facts On File Encyclopedia
of Black Women in America: Education. New York, NY: Facts On
File, Inc., 1997.
Source:
http://www.wilberforce.edu/library/archives/history/biographies/cooper.htm
http://www.gwu.edu/~e73afram/be-nk-gbe.html
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SLAVERY AND THE FRENCH REVOLUTIONISTS (1788-1805)
By Anna Julia Cooper
Translated with forward and introductory essay by Frances
Richardson Keller. The Edwin Mellen Press (hard bound), 1988
ISBN: 0-88946-637-8
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