Burroughs, Nannie Helen, 1879-1961
English,
Biographical notes:
In 1879, Nannie Helen Burroughs was born to a formerly enslaved couple living in Orange, Virginia. Her father died when she was young, and she and her mother relocated to Washington, DC. Burroughs excelled in school and graduated with honors from M Street High School (now Paul Laurence Dunbar High School). Despite her academic achievements, Burroughs was turned down for a Washington D.C. public school teaching position. Some historians speculate that the elite black community discriminated against Burroughs because she had darker skin. Undeterred, Burroughs decided to open her own school to educate and train poor, working African American women. Burroughs proposed her school initiative to the National Baptist Convention (NBC). In response, the organization purchased six acres of land in Northeast Washington, D.C. Now Burroughs needed money to construct the school. She did not, however, have unanimous support. Civil rights leader Booker T. Washington did not believe African Americans would donate money to found the school. But Burroughs did not want to rely on money from wealthy white donors. Relying on small donations from black women and children from the community, Burroughs managed to raise enough money to open the National Training School for Women and Girls. Even though some people disagreed with teaching women skills other than domestic work, the school was popular in the first half of the 20th century. The school originally operated out of a small farm house. In 1928, a larger building named Trades Hall was constructed. The hall housed twelve classrooms, three offices, an assembly area and a print shop. In addition to founding the National Training School for Women and Girls, Burroughs also advocated for greater civil rights for African Americans and women. At the time, black women had few career choices. Many did domestic work like cooking and cleaning. Burroughs believed women should have the opportunity to receive an education and job training. She wrote about the need for black and white women to work together to achieve the right to vote. She believed suffrage for African American women was crucial to protect their interests in an often discriminatory society. Burroughs died in May 1961. She never married and she devoted her life to the education of black women. In 1964, the school was renamed the Nannie Helen Burroughs School in her honor. Burroughs defied societal restrictions placed on her gender and race and her work foreshadowed the main principles of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and 1970s. The Trades Hall, now a National Historic Landmark, is the last physical legacy of her lifelong pursuit for worldwide racial and gender equality.
Links to collections
National Baptist Convention of the United States of America. Correspondence with Marian Anderson, 1959-1960.
University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Van Pelt Library
Johnson, Mordecai W. (Mordecai Wyatt), 1890-1976. Papers, 1913-1976.
Moorland-Spingarn Research Center, Howard University
Nannie Helen Burroughs Papers, 1900-1963, (bulk 1928-1960)
Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
Records Regarding Alleys Considered and Not Considered for Reclamation, 1934 - 1957
National Archives at Washington, D.C
Photographs of African-American Youth at Regional 4-H Camps, 1948 - 1961
National Archives at College Park
Charlotte Everett Hopkins Collection of National Civic Federation, Woman's Department, District of Columbia Section Records., 1900-1926, (bulk 1910-1918)
Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
Phelps-Stokes Fund. Phelps-Stokes Fund records, 1893-1970.
New York Public Library System, NYPL
Lawrence, Una Roberts, 1893-1972. Papers, 1839-1970.
Southern Baptist Historical Library & Archives
Booker T. Washington Papers, 1853-1946, (bulk 1900-1915)
Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
Terrell, Mary Church, 1863-1954. Mary Church Terrell papers, 1851-1962 (inclusive), 1886-1954 (bulk) [microform].
Yale University Library
Papers of Charlotte Hawkins Brown, 1900-1961
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
Papers of Charlotte Hawkins Brown, 1900-1961
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America
Mary Church Terrell Papers, 1851-1962, (bulk 1886-1954)
Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
Phelps-Stokes Fund records, 1893-1970
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Archives Section
Related names in SNAC
correspondedWith
Adams, Charles C. (Charles Christopher), 1873-1955
correspondedWith
Bethune, Mary McLeod, 1875-1955
correspondedWith
Bradford, Janie
associatedWith
Brown, Charlotte Hawkins, 1883-1961.
correspondedWith
Calloway, Rebekah
associatedWith
CHARLOTTE EUGENIA (HAWKINS) BROWN, 1883-1961
correspondedWith
De Priest, Oscar, 1871-1951
correspondedWith
Dillard, J. H. (James Hardy), 1856-1940
correspondedWith
Gaillard, Margery B.
correspondedWith
Gibbs, Henrietta M.
correspondedWith
Harrison, Earl L.
correspondedWith
Hert, Sallie.
correspondedWith
Hopkins, Charlotte Everett.
correspondedWith
Jackson, J. H. (Joseph Harrison), 1900-
correspondedWith
Jernagin, William Henry, b. 1869
associatedWith
Johnson, Mordecai W. (Mordecai Wyatt), 1890-1976.
correspondedWith
Jordan, Lewis Garnett, 1854?-
correspondedWith
Lampkin, Daisy E. (Daisy Elizabeth), 1882-1965
correspondedWith
Lawrence, Una Roberts, b. 1893
correspondedWith
Layten, Shirley W.
correspondedWith
Mallory, Kathleen Moore, 1879-1954
correspondedWith
Mdodana-Arbouin, Uvee R.
associatedWith
Montgomery, Helen Barrett, 1861-1934.
correspondedWith
Moton, Robert Russa, 1867-1940
correspondedWith
Pickens, William, 1881-1954
correspondedWith
Powell, A. Clayton (Adam Clayton), 1865-1953
correspondedWith
Powell, Adam Clayton, 1908-1972
correspondedWith
Scott, Emmett J. (Emmett Jay), 1873-1957
correspondedWith
Stewart, Sallie W. (Sallie Wyatt), b. 1881
correspondedWith
Stokes, Anson Phelps, 1874-1958
associatedWith
Terrell, Mary Church, 1863-1954.
correspondedWith
Wallace, Geneva
correspondedWith
Washington, Booker T., 1856-1915
correspondedWith
Williams, Lacey Kirk, 1871-1941
correspondedWith
Wood, Marguerite V.
correspondedWith
Yost, Ellis A., Mrs.
correspondedWith
Young, Geneva R.
associatedWith
Cooperative Industries (Washington, D.C.)
associatedWith
Frederick Douglass Memorial and Historical Association.
associatedWith
National Association of Wage Earners.
associatedWith
National Baptist Convention of the United States of America.
associatedWith
National League of Republican Colored Women.
associatedWith
Phelps-Stokes Fund.
Collection Locations
no collection locations known
Comparison
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Information
Subjects:
- African Americans
- African Americans
- Baptists
- Community development
- Community development
- Missions
- Missions
- Schools
- Schools
- Women
- African Americans
- Community development
- Missions
- Schools
Occupations:
- Civil rights workers
- Clergy
- Educators
- Religious leaders
Places:
- DC, US
- VA, US
- Washington (D.C.) (as recorded)
- Africa (as recorded)
Variant Names
Burroughs, Nannie Helen, 1879-1961
Burroughs, Nannie Helen, 1879-
Burroughs, Nannie H., 1879-1961.
Burroughs, Nannie Helen
Burroughs, Nannie H.
Burroughs, Nannie.