User:Henriettapussycat/sandbox
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This is a timeline of African-American women's history.
18th century
- 1773
- First known African-American woman to publish a book: Phillis Wheatley (Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral)
19th century
1800s
1810s
1820s
1830s
- 1832
- Oberlin College opens: the first college in the United States to regularly admit African-American and female students.
- 1833
- Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society founded.
- Prudence Crandall creates an all-girl's school and what is widely regarded as the first integrated classroom in the United States.[1]
- 1837
- The first Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women is held on May 9.[2]
1840s
1850s
- 1851
- Sojourner Truth gives her speech, Ain't I A Woman, at the Women's Convention in Akron, Ohio, on May 29.
- 1858
- First African-American female college professor: Sarah Jane Woodson Early, Wilberforce College
1860s
- 1862
- First African-American woman to earn a B.A.: Mary Jane Patterson, Oberlin College[3]
- 1866
- First African-American woman enlistee in the U.S. Army: Cathay Williams
- 1869
- First African-American woman school principal: Fanny Jackson Coppin (Institute for Colored Youth)
1870s
- 1879
- First African American to graduate from a formal nursing school: Mary Eliza Mahoney, Boston, Massachusetts
1880s
- 1881
- First African American whose signature appeared on U.S. paper currency: Blanche K. Bruce, Registrar of the Treasury.
- 1883
- First known African-American woman to graduate from one of the Seven Sisters college: Hortense Parker (Mount Holyoke College)
- 1885
- First African-American woman to hold a patent: Sarah E. Goode, for the cabinet bed, Chicago, Illinois
1890s
- 1892
- First African American to sing at Carnegie Hall: Matilda Sissieretta Joyner Jones
- 1895
- First African-American woman to work for the United States Postal Service: Mary Fields
- ^ "Tisler, C.C. Prudence Crandall, Abolitionist", Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1908-1984), Vol. 33, No. 2, Jan. 1940.
- ^ The Abolitionist Sisterhood, Jean Fagan Yellin, John C. Van Horne, 1994, ISBN 0801480116, accessed 17 November 2008
- ^ Logan, Rayford W. Howard University: The First Hundred Years 1867–1967, NYU Press, 2004, ISBN 0814702635, ISBN 978-0814702635. p. 5