Maria Stewart was a journalist, educator, abolitionist, and after the Civil War became the director of housekeeping services at Freedmen's Hospital
She was the first Black woman to publish political writings and to give public lectures to mixed audiences #WomensHistoryMonth 🧵
Maria Miller was born free in Hartford, CT, 1803, but orphaned at five
She was "bound out" as a domestic servant to a family of clergyman until 15
At the age of 23 she married James W. Stewart, a War of 1812 veteran, and settled in Boston as part of a small Black middle class
While living in Boston the Stewarts became admirers of David Walker, a clothing shop owner and member of the Massachusetts General Colored Association, the first abolitionist organization in Boston
In 1829 Walker published his highly controversial and influential 'Appeal'
Random fact, the Stewarts actually lived in the same house that David Walker and his wife Eliza had previously lived in from 1827 to 1829, 81 Joy Street
The Stewarts moved in after the Walkers relocated to Brigde Street
In 1829 James Stewart fell ill and died and David Walker died under mysterious circumstances in 1830
After these events, Maria Stewart felt called upon by God to write and took her writings to William Lloyd Garrison
Her first writings appeared in the Liberator in 1831
Stewart was a fierce critic of White Christians calling them "hypocrites" and "vipers" and criticized the North as well writing:
"Tell us no more of Southern slavery; for with few exceptions, I consider our condition but little better than that."
A few of my favorite quotes from Maria Stewart from her writings and public speeches
Her public speaking career only lasted three years because she was considered too radical and broke taboos of women speaking to male/mixed audiences
She relocated to New York where she worked as an educator and published her 1st book Productions of Maria Stewart in 1935
Although Stewart never returned to journalistsic writing after leaving Boston, she continued to be dedicated to abolitionists causes and helped raise money for the North Star, a Rochester, NY newspaper started by Frederick Douglass
In 1852 Stewart moved to Baltimore opening her own private school but the venture failed and Maria became destitute
Because white people had cheated Maria out of her husband's substantial estate, she had no safety net except for the charity of the local Black community
In 1861 Stewart moved to D.C teaching once again
After the war ended she became the director of housekeeping services at Freedmen's Hospital, which would later become the Howard University Hospital
In 1871 she bought a building near Howard and founded a successful school
In 1879 Maria Stewart was able to take advantage of new legislation that gave pensions to widows and soldiers of The War of 1812
Still feeling that her God given calling was writing, she used the money to publish her 2nd book, Meditations from the Pen of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart
On December 17th, 1879, Maria Stewart passed on in Freedmen's Hospital at the age of 76 and was buried at Graceland Cemetery 🕊
🇳🇬 John Ogbu and 🇺🇸 Signithia Fordham, both academics and anthropologists, developed the concept that Black Americans don't do well in school because they consider doing well in school as "acting white"
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Here's a quick wiki on their backgrounds
It's no surprise these two would develop this theory
In 1986 they published the 'acting white' paper which says that since BAs are involuntary minorities they have developed an "oppositional collective or social identity" and "[t]hey oppose adopting appropriate academic attitudes and behaviors because they are considered "white"
"Childhood obesity is a major consequence of poverty."
"Racial disparity in obesity is one of the main contributors to racial disparities in cardio-metabolic
disease as well as mortality."
"Black children’s risk of obesity was not dependent on family income. This pattern was totally different from White children in whom income had a protective effect against obesity."
I been seeing way too many people in the comments and QTs saying how great the 1940s was because of a picture showing Black Americans looking prosperous
All these photos are also from 1940s America #BlackHistory
Educational Attainment, Race, and Ethnicity as Predictors for Ideal Cardiovascular Health: From the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 🧵 1/9 ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/JA…
"The lifestyle and wellness goals that comprise ideal cardiovascular health may not be equitably obtained across sociodemographic groups, and we sought to determine the relation between race, ethnicity, and level of education with cardiovascular health."
"In some studies, education level has been shown to have a greater effect on life expectancy than does race. Past literature has advocated for education as a means to overcome race‐based differences."
Call to Action: Structural Racism as a Fundamental Driver of Health Disparities: A Presidential Advisory From the American Heart Association 🧵1/5 ahajournals.org/doi/10.1161/CI…
"Black Americans continue to experience the highest mortality rates attributable to CVD and stroke, with almost 30% higher CVD mortality and 45% higher stroke mortality than non-Hispanic White Americans."
"In the health care setting, racial disparities are striking with regard to how often Black patients do not receive life-saving care, thereby impacting who lives and who dies after cardiac arrest."