MAGGIE LENA (MITCHELL) WALKER Biography - Bussiness people and enterpreneurs

 
 

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MAGGIE LENA (MITCHELL) WALKER

Name: Maggie Lena Walker                                                               
Born: 1867 Richmond, Virginia, United States                                           
Died: 15 December 1934 Richmond, Virginia, United States                               
                                                                                       
Maggie Lena Walker (1867-1934) was an African American entrepreneur and civic         
leader. She and her associates organized a variety of enterprises that advanced       
the African American community while expanding the public role of women.               
                                                                                       
Maggie Lena Walker was born in Richmond, Virginia, just after the Civil War.           
Family tradition says that her father was Eccles Cuthbert, an Irish-born               
newspaperman. Her mother, Elizabeth Draper, married William Mitchell while they       
were both working in the home of Elizabeth Van Lew, a famous Union spy. He later       
became a waiter in one of the fashionable hotels in the city, but after only a         
few years was found drowned. Elizabeth Mitchell then supported her family by           
doing laundry. They lived in a small alley house shared with several relatives.       
                                                                                       
Despite her poverty, she persevered through the city school system and graduated       
from the Colored Normal School in 1883. Her class of seven protested the fact         
that African Americans were not allowed to use the city auditorium for their           
graduations as whites did, but had to use an African American church. Their           
stand was courageous since it risked their hopes for jobs as teachers in the           
system they challenged. A compromise permitted the graduation to take place in         
the school itself.                                                                     
                                                                                       
She taught for three years, but, following school system policy, gave up her job       
when she married Armstead Walker, Jr., who worked in his family's construction         
and bricklaying business. Later he was also a postal carrier. The Walkers had         
three sons, one of whom died in infancy.                                               
                                                                                       
While she was still in high school Walker joined a fraternal organization, the         
Independent Order of St. Luke. Such organizations were popular and numerous.           
Membership gave people a group that helped in times of illness and death and           
provided sickness and life insurance, often otherwise not available to African         
Americans. The meetings centered around a ritual with colorful robes, chances to       
earn advancement, and opportunities to learn new skills. A "fraternal" provided       
an important way to bring individual contributions of time and money together to       
run businesses and carry out significant social projects.                             
                                                                                       
The Independent Order of St. Luke was founded in Baltimore in 1867. When the           
order moved into Richmond, it did not flourish as other societies had. In 1899,       
when Walker was elected secretary, it was on the verge of bankruptcy. She             
brought some training in business, 16 years of experience holding minor posts in       
the order, and energy, enthusiasm, and organizational ability to the job. St.         
Luke soon created the combined position of secretary-treasurer for her, and she       
devoted the rest of her life to building membership and resources, expanding           
activities in business and social service, and keeping the financial base             
efficient. She liked to describe the order as a woman's organization that gave         
equal opportunity to men. At its height in the 1920s it claimed 100,000 members       
in 22 states.                                                                         
                                                                                       
In addition to real estate and the insurance program, the major St. Luke               
businesses founded under Walker's leadership included the St. Luke Penny Savings       
Bank, which opened in 1903. It had a woman president and several women board           
members. By 1931 it had merged with the two remaining African American banks in       
Richmond, resulting in the Consolidated Bank and Trust Company, which still           
existed in the mid-1980s. Walker is often described as the first woman bank           
president in the United States, but her achievement lay in presiding over a           
successful bank. Another project, the order's newspaper, the St. Luke Herald,         
printed outspoken editorials on the condition of African Americans in bigoted         
times.                                                                                 
                                                                                       
As segregation in the South increased, many African American leaders emphasized       
entrepreneurship, "buy Black" campaigns, and the employment of African Americans       
as a primary avenue for community advancement. Walker agreed to that agenda and       
added a powerful plea for the creation of employment for African American women       
other than in domestic service.                                                       
                                                                                       
Walker was a charismatic speaker whose favorite topics were race pride and unity,     
women's problems and potential, African American business, and oppression. As         
her importance grew, she became more and more active in civic affairs. She was         
the founder and lifelong head of the Colored Women's Council of Richmond, which       
raised money for local projects and maintained a community house.                     
                                                                                       
She served many years on the executive committee of the National Association of       
Colored Women, whose projects included restoring and opening the Frederick             
Douglass Home to the public. For over a decade she was a member of the board of       
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the guiding         
spirit of the Richmond branch. She was on the board of the Richmond Urban League       
and a member of the Interracial Commission. She was on the board of two schools       
for girls--one in Richmond and one in Washington--and served as a trustee of           
Hartshorn College and Virginia Union University. She was an active contributor         
to the work of her beloved First African Baptist Church.                               
                                                                                       
Walker became a relatively wealthy woman and a philanthropist. Her home was made       
a national historic site, administered by the National Park Service. There one         
can see how the family lived, learn about the Richmond African American               
community, and appreciate the breadth of her friendships. The library walls are       
lined with pictures of friends: Booker T. Washington, W. E. B. DuBois, Marcus         
Garvey, Nannie Helen Burroughs, Mary McLeod Bethune, Langston Hughes, and many         
others. The shelves are full of books on African American history and life.           
                                                                                       
Walker achieved what she did despite the heavy social odds against her. She also       
had personal handicaps and suffering. In 1915 her husband Armstead was shot and       
killed by their son, Russell, who mistook his father for a burglar. He was             
indicted for murder, but acquitted. Walker had severe health problems and spent       
the last seven years of her life in a wheelchair. However, she continued to           
travel to places as far away as Florida and Chicago. Walker died of diabetic           
gangrene on December 15, 1934. According to tradition, her last message was "Have     
hope, have faith, have courage, and carry on."