She Believed Education Was The Key To A Better Life

three black women sitting on stairs together
Shonda
September 12, 2022

Mary Church Terrell was taught that our children’s education was the key to our future. But the further she took her own education, the more she realized it was all for nothing if she couldn’t help her people.

She was in W.E.B. DuBois’ “Talented Tenth,” fair-skinned Black people whose college degrees obligated them to give back. She created Black curricula, and fought for women’s voting rights by co-founding the National Association of Colored Women (NACW) in 1896. 

She also dedicated her life to fighting two horrifying things.

The lynching of Black men AND penal labor, aka convict leasing – essentially enslaving Black convicts. She confronted these horrible phenomena with a powerful book that demanded an end to such inhumane treatment.

While lynching continued, her book became an important tool to galvanize people against this egregious crime.

She used her education as activism and tools to uplift the Black community, eventually becoming the first Black woman appointed to the Washington D.C.’s Board of Education. But her crowning achievement? Being a founding member of the NAACP! 

She embodied the NACW's motto, "Lifting as we climb." How are you using the opportunities you’ve been afforded to support our people?

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