Nannies Helping Hands NonProfit

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Nannies Helping Hands mission to strengthen our local communities by providing educational, health, and social services while encouraging and empowering individuals to improve their and quality of life over all.

Patricia Harris | Known as: Ambassador, professor - Life: 1924-1985 | Patricia Harris was a trailblazer. She was the fir...
03/21/2022

Patricia Harris | Known as: Ambassador, professor - Life: 1924-1985 | Patricia Harris was a trailblazer. She was the first Black woman to serve as an American ambassador when she represented the United States in Luxembourg from 1965 to 1967, and the first appointed to a Cabinet when she was named Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in 1977. (Public Domain/Library of Congress)

Annie Turnbo Malone: A Black Philanthropist and EntrepreneurBefore Oprah Winfrey and Madame C.J. Walker there was Annie ...
03/17/2022

Annie Turnbo Malone: A Black Philanthropist and Entrepreneur

Before Oprah Winfrey and Madame C.J. Walker there was Annie Turnbo Malone (aka Annie Minerva Turnbo Pope Malone and Annie Minerva Turnbo Malone), an African American entrepreneur and philanthropist during the early 20th century. Malone is reportedly the U.S.'s first black millionaire based on reports of $14 million in assets held in 1920 from her beauty and cosmetic enterprises.

Early Life of Annie Turnbo

On August 9, 1869, Robert Turnbo and Isabella Cook became parents to Annie in Metropolis, Illinois. Annie attended school in Illinois where she apprentenced with her sister as a hairdresser. By 1889, Malone had developed her own scalp and hair products that she demonstrated and sold from a buggy throughout Illinois.

Launches the "Poro" Brand in St. Louis, MO

By 1902, Malone's business growth led her to St. Louis, Missouri, which at the time held the fourth largest population of African Americans. In St. Louis she copyrighted her Poro brand beauty products. In 1914, in a St. Louis wedding, Malone married the school principal Aaron Eugene Malon.

By 1917, Malone opened the doors of Poro College, a beauty college which was later attended by Madam C.J. Walker. The school reportedly graduated about 75,000 agents world-wide, including the Caribbean. By 1930, the first full year of the Great Depression, Malone had moved from Missouri after divorcing her second husband and settled on Chicago's South Side.

The Black Philanthropist

From 1919 to 1943, Malone served as board president of the St. Louis Colored Orphan's Home. She had donated the first $10,000 to build the orphanage's new building in 1919. During the 1920s, Malone's philanthropy included financing the education of two full-time students in every historically black college and university. Her $25,000 donation to Howard University was among the largest gifts the university had received by a private donor of African descent.

On May 10, 1957, Annie Turnbo Malone was treated for a stroke at Provident Hospital in Chicago where she died. At the time of her death Poro beauty colleges were in operation in more than thirty U.S. cities.

St. Louis honors her memory with the Annie Malone Children and Family Service Center whose mission is "is to improve the quality of life for children, families, elderly and the community by providing social services, educational programs, advocacy and entrepreneurship."

Madam CJ Walker’s family bought these products back to life. They can be purchased at Walmart.

https://www.walmart.com/m/brands/madambymcjw

Mary Eliza Mahoney!!! In 1879, Mahoney was the first African American to graduate from an American school of nursing.
03/16/2022

Mary Eliza Mahoney!!! In 1879, Mahoney was the first African American to graduate from an American school of nursing.

Angela Davis | Known as: Professor, activist - Life: 1944-present | Angela Davis was a major activist in the late 1960s ...
03/14/2022

Angela Davis | Known as: Professor, activist - Life: 1944-present | Angela Davis was a major activist in the late 1960s and early '70s. Profoundly affected by her childhood in the segregated city of Birmingham, Ala., she joined the Communist Party and became an affiliate of the Black Panthers as a young woman, and ran as the Communist vice-presidential candidate in 1980 and 1984. She was arrested, tried, and acquitted for her role in a Black Panther courtroom shootout. She went on to have a distinguished academic career at institutions including Pomona College, Rutgers, and Vassar, and has remained politically active.

In celebrating International Women’s Day, Alice Walker is to be recognized. Alice WalkerNovelist, Essayist, Poet, Activi...
03/10/2022

In celebrating International Women’s Day, Alice Walker is to be recognized.

Alice Walker
Novelist, Essayist, Poet, Activist for Peace, Social justice, Civil rights, Gender Equality and the Environment : b. 1944

Alice Walker is a world-famous writer and activist, best known for her work in the Civil Rights and Feminist movements. She was born on February 9, 1944, in Eatonton, Georgia, the youngest in a family of eight children. Her father worked as a sharecropper, her mother as a maid to support their family in the Jim Crow South, where black children were expected to work the fields with their parents. To keep her daughter safe and out of the fields, Alice's mother enrolled her in first grade at the age of four. Throughout her childhood, Alice excelled academically while attending segregated schools.

At age eight, Walker was shot accidentally in her right eye with a BB gun while playing with her brothers. Scar tissue grew over the blind eye. Before the accident, Alice had been a pretty, lively, talkative child. After the scar tissue appeared, she grew self-conscious about her appearance and withdrew to a solitary world of writing and books. During this time, she felt ashamed, alone, and abandoned by her family. Six years later, the scar tissue was removed and she recovered her confidence. She went on to become a popular high school valedictorian. However, the years spent in isolation made a permanent impact on Walker's worldview. She learned to feel "empathy and a sense of kinship with other people she perceived to be afflicted" . She also developed the powers of observation that serve her as a writer. In this sense, the most painful experience of Walker's youth laid the groundwork for her activism and writing.

Walker earned a scholarship to Spelman College in Atlanta. In 2013, she recalled her first trip to Atlanta. She stepped onto a bus and sat down in a front seat. Shortly after, she was confronted:

"I was ordered immediately to the back of the bus because a white woman complained to the white bus driver…. I had been writing poetry since I was nine, but I realized I would never have the luxury of only writing poetry; that I would have to be politically active in order to achieve enough freedom to write at all."

Even then, Alice Walker felt called to a life of activism to make art and self-expression possible for herself and others. Eventually, she transferred to Sarah Lawrence College in New York City and graduated in 1965, at the height of the Civil Rights Movement. That same year, she published her first short story, which would be collected in the 1967 anthology, The Best Short Stories by Negro Writers, edited by Langston Hughes.

Three years later, Walker married Melvyn Leventhal, a Jewish civil rights lawyer. (1) They moved to Mississippi, where their in*******al marriage was illegal due to the state´s anti-miscegenation laws. The young couple was threatened and harassed. They had a daughter, Rebecca, in 1969, and stayed married until 1976. During this period in her life, Alice Walker built a name for herself as a writer -- publishing poetry, fiction, and magazine journalism.

The peak of Alice Walker's writing success came in 1982, when her novel The Color Purple won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award as it became a bestseller. Three years later, Stephen Spielberg directed Danny Glover, Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey in an award-winning film based on the book. In total, Walker has published more than thirty books, including fiction, poetry, criticism, and memoir.

In 1983, Walker published an essay collection, In Search of Our Mother's Gardens. In the title essay, the garden becomes a metaphor for black women's creativity and self-expression. For many generations, women's creativity was suppressed under the weight of the hard labor they were forced to do. In spite of difficult living conditions, Walker's mother found a place to create while providing for her family: her garden. Alice Walker's career has been driven by her desire to live in a world where all people have the freedom to be creative. Inspired by her mother's creative outlet, Walker titled her website "Alice Walker's Garden."

After achieving literary fame, it would have been easy for Alice Walker to live a private life, safely away from the challenges of an activist lifestyle. Instead, she turned her attention to injustice wherever she saw it in the world. She has protested the South African apartheid, the Iraq War, the Israeli occupation of Palestine, and female ge***al mutilation. A fearless and independent thinker, Walker has taken criticism for her activism from many sides. But she doesn´t back down from her convictions. In 2012, Walker declined to have The Color Purple published in Israel in protest of the Israel's treatment of Palestinians. In her letter to the publisher, she compared the situation to South African apartheid and Jim Crow in the American South, claiming that conditions in Israel and Palestine were even worse. In an echo of the non-violence of Martin Luther King Jr. and the American Civil Rights Movement, Walker joined the non-violent BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) protest in hopes of inspiring change in Israel. (3) In an interview, Walker had more to say about the conflict:

"I am tormented knowing what is being done to the children of Gaza, for instance, because my country has paid for weapons Israel uses to murder and terrify them. When I was in Gaza I talked with psychiatrists and social workers and of course with some of the children. My view is that all children are the responsibility of all adults. The Jewish child is precious, so is the Arab child. So is the African Child and the Indian child and so on. To turn away from them is impossible for me."

When asked how to keep up a strong spirit of activism after years of struggle, Walker said this:

"I have a deep sense of oneness with the planet, the cosmos. I realize I am home, forever, in this Universe. A Universe that seems to me perfect in every way. It is tragic that our focus on harming others is fatally distracting humans from this invigorating reality. Whatever happens to me I will always be part of this amazing Wonder that is life in this vast Creation. I am thankful. When I am not overwhelmed by sadness I am filled with joy."

In literature and in life, Alice Walker´s legacy is her conviction, speaking out for human dignity, civil rights, and freedom.

 Grainger
03/09/2022

Grainger

On International Woman’s Day we recognize the FIRST African American Woman who is being nominated for at seat in the Sup...
03/08/2022

On International Woman’s Day we recognize the FIRST African American Woman who is being nominated for at seat in the Supreme Court… Ketanji Brown Jackson. “She is an experienced Judge, with stints as a public defender, a U.S. Sentencing Commissioner, and a lawyer in private practice, Jackson is poised to make history as the first Black woman ri ever serve on the Supreme Court, as well as the first former public defender.”
~Brennan Center for Justice

03/08/2022
Jane Bolin was a trailblazing attorney who became the first African American female judge in the United States, serving ...
03/07/2022

Jane Bolin was a trailblazing attorney who became the first African American female judge in the United States, serving on New York's Family Court for four decades.

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