Josephine St.Pierre Ruffin
Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin
Junious Ricardo Stanton
As
we celebrate Women’s History Month we will focus on women of African descent
who may not be well known but who nevertheless positively impacted their
communities, the nation and the larger society. Today we are going to share the
life story of Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin an activist, journalist and newspaper
publisher in Nineteenth century
Josephine
St. Pierre was born in
In 1858 at the
age of fifteen Josephine married George Lewis Ruffin and the couple established
their home in
During the War
Between the States Josephine Ruffin was active in recruiting soldiers for the 54th and 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiments in the
Union Army. She was engaged in charity work in
Following
her husband’s death, Mrs Ruffin remained active in social issues. “In
1879, Ruffin created the Boston Kansas Relief Association. The organization was
dedicated to helping African Americans settle in
She was enthusiastically engaged in the women’s suffrage movement and was a major force in the bourgeoning women’s club movement on the local and national levels. She helped convene several national women’s conventions. “In 1894, Ruffin formed the Women's New Era Club of Boston and served as its first president. She also brought together several African-American women's groups for the First National Conference of Colored Women in 1895. The following year, the National Federation of Afro-American Women, the Woman's Era Clubs of Boston and the Colored Women's League of Washington, D.C., merged to become the National Association of Colored Women.
Ruffin was also active in the women's suffrage and the temperance movements. She was member of the Massachusetts School Suffrage Association and the Massachusetts Moral Education Association. Through these organizations, Ruffin became acquainted with Julia Ward Howe and Lucy Stone. She may have been accepted into clubs for white women, but she still faced racial prejudice.” https://www.ourbiography.com/josephine-st-pierre-ruffin/
“Believing that a national organization
for black women was needed, she convened the first annual convention in 1895
which drew 100 women from 20 clubs across the
Ruffin stated the goal of the women’s club movement was to get African-American women engaged and into the fore of social change. “We are women, American women, as intensely interested in all that pertains to us as such as all other American women; we are not alienating or withdrawing, we are only coming to the front, willing to join any others in the same work and welcoming any others to join us.” https://www.womenhistoryblog.com/2014/01/african-american-women-in-the-civil-war.html
Mrs.
Ruffin was a journalist, editor and publisher. She edited Women’s Era the first newspaper edited and published by
African-American women from 1890 to 1897. She was a founding member of the
Boston NAACP in 1910 and remained active in
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