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Phillips-Cunningham awarded grant to research educator, labor activist

Nine African-American women posed, standing, full length, with Nannie Burroughs holding banner reading,
Nannie Helen Burroughs (left) holding banner reading, "Banner State Woman's National Baptist Convention." Photo courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.
Danielle Phillips-Cunningham headshot
Danielle Phillips-Cunningham, Ph.D., associate professor of multicultural women鈥檚 and gender studies at Texas Woman鈥檚 University. Photo courtesy Phillips-Cunningham.

June 10, 2020 鈥 DENTON 鈥 Texas Woman鈥檚 University associate professor of multicultural women鈥檚 and gender studies Danielle Phillips-Cunningham, Ph.D., was recently awarded a in the amount of $6,000. The grant will support her ongoing Library of Congress research into the previously unexamined life of Nannie Helen Burroughs, a philosopher, educator, religious leader and civil rights activist.

Phillips-Cunningham aims to produce the first book documenting Burroughs鈥 historic efforts to address the education and labor concerns of African American domestic workers during the early 20th century. 鈥淚 plan to publish the first comprehensive history of Burroughs鈥 life and achievements, which will be made accessible to both academic and public audiences,鈥 said Phillips-Cunningham.

In 1909, Burroughs founded the National Training School for Women and Girls in Washington, D.C., to provide occupational training for southern black migrant women. To overcome segregation in the labor movement, she also co-founded the National Association of Wage Earners in 1920, the first national labor organization for African American domestic workers.

鈥淒uring the early 20th century, thousands of southern African American women migrated to northern cities to create better lives for themselves and their families鈥 Some migrated for better wages, but many migrated for educational opportunities,鈥 Phillips-Cunningham said. 鈥淒omestic service was a means to that end. They were subjected to low wages and dangerous working conditions while navigating the challenges of racial segregation, sexual harassment in their workplaces, and limited educational opportunities.鈥

Her project will provide a full history of Burroughs鈥 labor organizing, which established labor rights for domestic workers, and documentation of the critical role that women鈥檚 household employment and labor organizing played in the mass movement of African Americans from the South to the North in the early 20th century.

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Page last updated 2:32 PM, June 10, 2020