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Boston, Massachusetts. Date of Death: March 13, 1924. Place of Burial: Cambridge, Massachusetts. Cemetery Name: Mount Auburn Cemetery. A plaque, inconspicuously attached to 103 Charles Street, recognizes the work of a significant Beacon Hill activist from the turn of the 20 th century, Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin.
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Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin (née St. Pierre; August 31, 1842 – March 13, 1924 [1]) was a publisher, journalist, civil rights leader, suffragist, abolitionist, and editor of the Woman's Era, the first national newspaper published by and for African American women.
Through the many clubs that were formed during this era, Black women attacked issues of racism, sexism, poverty, education, economics and socio-political empowerment simultaneously. One of the most important figures in this movement is Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, a woman who had her finger on the pulse of postbellum American society.
Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin died from kidney disease on March 13, 1924. Vocabulary elitist: Supporting the idea that the wealthy should be in charge of society.
Josephine St. Pierre was born on August 31, 1842 into a well-respected Bostonian family (Streitmatter 2017). Taking full advantage of her, then unusual, position in society, St. Pierre married George Ruffin, one of the first African Americans to ever graduate from Harvard Law School, at the age of 16 and they immediately became active in the ...
May 29, 2020 · Josephine was a journalist who founded the Women’s Era newspaper, the first newspaper written by and for black women in the United States. She later became editor of the Boston Courant , a black weekly paper.
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As one of the most influential movers of the African American women's club movement that worked for racial uplift, the feminist Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin was one of the first Americans publicly to address black women's unique role at the intersection of race and gender.