MARY CHURCH TERRELL (1863-1954)
Mary Church
Terrell, one of the early women of color engaged in lecturing and other
activities for recognition of women and Negroes, was born in Memphis on
September 23, 1863, the year of the Emancipation Proclamation. Her father,
Robert R. Church, Sr., a pioneer Memphis businessman, was married twice.
Mary, known to members of her family as "Mollie," and her brother
were born during the first marriage to Louisa, which terminated in divorce
when the children were very small. Robert, Jr., and his sister, Annette,
were born during the second marriage to Anna (Wright) Church.
Because of limited educational facilities in Memphis at the time, while
very young she lived with close family friends in Yellow Springs, Ohio,
to attend a "Model School" connected with Antioch College. Subsequently,
she attended public schools in Ohio, Oberlin Academy, and enrolled in the
four-year "Classical" or "Gentleman's Course" at Oberlin
College, Oberlin, Ohio, being graduated in 1884. Mary completed her education
by spending two years in Europe, studying French, German, and Italian languages.
In 1891, Oberlin College offered her the position of registrar of the
school, including faculty position, but she declined the offer because
of her forthcoming marriage. During its centennial celebration in 1933,
Oberlin recognized her as one of its one hundred outstanding alumni. In
1948, Oberlin conferred upon her the honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters.
After being graduated from college, Mary returned to Memphis and lived
for a year with her father, who discouraged her interest in teaching there.
He did not object when she accepted a position as a member of the faculty
of Wilberforce University at Xenia, Ohio. She left Wilberforce to accept
a teaching position at the M Street High School in Washington, D. C., where
she met her future husband.
On October 18, 1891, in Memphis, Mary married Robert Heberton Terrell
(1857-1925) at the family home, 384 South Lauderdale Street, where the
ceremony and reception took place. Annette Church was the Dower girl and
Robert Church, Jr., was the ring bearer.
Robert Terrell was a graduate of Groton Academy, Groton, Massachusetts,
and a magna cum laude graduate in the class of 1884 of Harvard University,
Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was graduated as valedictorian of his 1889
class at Howard University Law School, Washington, D. C., and received
a master's degree in law from Howard in 1893. Terrell taught at the M Street
High School in Washington, and later practiced law with John R. Lynch,
a former member of the U. S. House of Representatives from Mississippi.
He practiced law until he received four successive four-year Presidential
appointments as judge of the Municipal Court of the District of Columbia,
where he remained until ill health forced him to retire.
The Terrells were parents of two children. Phyllis and adopted daughter
Mary (deceased). There were no grandchildren.
After her marriage, Mary Church Terrell made her home in Washington
and maintained a summer home at Highland Beach, Maryland, which she built
next to the home of Frederick Douglass. She became active in the feminist
movement, founding a women's club, the Colored Woman's League, in Washington
in 1892. This organization merged with the National Federation of Afro-American
Women in 1896 and adopted the name National Federation of Colored Women.
Mary Church Terrell was elected the first president.
She was a popular speaker and lecturer and wrote many articles denouncing
segregation. Her appointment to the District of Columbia Board of Education
in 1895 was a first in America for a woman of color. She resigned in 1901,
was reappointed in 1906, and held the post until 1911. In 1909, she was
one of two Negro women (Ida B. Wells-Barnett was the other and both were
former Memphians) invited to sign the "Call" and be present at
the organizational meeting of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People, thus becoming a charter member of the national organization.
She assisted in the formation of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority at Howard
University in 1914, accepted honorary membership, and wrote the Delta Creed,
which outlined a code of conduct for young women. In World War One, she
was involved with the War Camp Community Service, which aided in the recreation
and, later, the demobilization of Negro servicemen. She worked in the suffrage
movement, which pushed for enactment of the Nineteenth Amendment to the
Constitution.
Mary Church Terrell was involved in the international women's movement
on three occasions. She represented colored women on the American delegation
to the International Congress of Women at Berlin in 1904 and was the only
women to deliver her address in English, German, and French. Her theme
was equal rights for women and Negroes wherever they may be found. In 1919,
she received international recognition as a speaker on the program at the
Quinquennial International Peace Conference in Zurich, and in 1937 she
delivered an address before the International Assembly of the World Fellowship
of Faith in London. In 1940, she wrote her autobiography, A Colored
Woman In A White World.
At age 89, she marched with her cane at the head of a picket line, carrying
her sign to desegregate Kresge's store and Thompson's restaurant with members
of the Coordinating Committee for the Enforcement of the District of Columbia
Anti-Discrimination Laws. The Smithsonian Institution acquired from her
family a full-length oil portrait of her, which it displays periodically
at its National Portrait Gallery in connection with her activities in the
feminist and civil rights movements.
On July 24, 1954, Mary Church Terrell died at age 90, after a brief
illness at Anne Arrundel General Hospital, Annapolis, Maryland, a short
distance from her summer home at Highland Beach.
Roberta Church and Ronald Walter