Om Nannie Helen Burroughs
The overlooked story of one of the most influential labor leaders of the twentieth century reveals powerful lessons that still resonateAt the dawn of the twentieth century, Black girls and women faced a harsh career landscape. Domestic labor and sharecropping-which were the most unregulated and lowest-paying occupations for women in the U.S. economy-were the few available ways for Black women and girls to make a living in Jane Crow America. In response to these circumstances, Nannie Helen Burroughs, the pioneering Black American educator and civil rights leader, established the National Training School for Women and Girls (NTS) in Washington, DC. Nannie Helen Burroughs tells the story of the powerful and unprecedented labor movement that resulted from Burroughs's work at the NTS and with her colleagues in the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs. The NTS proved to be a revolutionary labor and educational initiative that redefined household employment as a profession where social justice for the Black community could be achieved. The NTS was integral to the Black clubwomen's labor movement, which paved the way for the broader transformation of the economic landscape for Black women and girls. Nannie Helen Burroughs shines a light on a history that has been largely overlooked by scholars. It establishes Burroughs as one of America's most influential labor leaders in the twentieth century and reveals the powerful lessons her work and ideas still offer America's laborers, labor organizers, scholars, and women's rights and racial justice activists.
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