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West Virginia Women's Suffrage Trail

Zone 7 of 10: Charleston

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This is a contributing entry for West Virginia Women's Suffrage Trail and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

In 1898, Black women in Charleston, West Virginia, organized a self-help civic organization called the Charleston Woman’s Improvement League. The League sponsored cultural events, supported education, and promoted a variety of causes that were important to members of the city's African American community. The women were particularly active in mentoring young women, creating two auxiliary organizations: Polly Pigtails for children and the League Teens for young women.


Members of the Charleston Woman’s Improvement League in 1928. From the left, they are, seated, Mary Clark, Rebecca Bullard, Flora Webster Brooks, Ruth S. Norman, Jane Spaulding, Karolyn Franklin, Florence Gordan, Leota Claire, Nancy Carper, and Ethel Davis; standing in the second row are, from the left, Mary Kimbrough, Cornella Wright, Lucenda Sanders, Hattie Clark, Vera Ford Powell, Carrie James Crichlow, E.A. McGhee, Lizzie Hopkins, Maude Wanzer, Inez Hall, Josephine Moore, Mary Carper Gray, and Ida Page; standing in the back row, from the left, are Flora Gardner, Nan Lou Stephenson, Sarah Bullard, Nina C. Gamble, Amy Hopkins, and Maude Clark Peters.

Members of the Charleston Woman’s Improvement League in 1928. From the left, they are, seated, Mary Clark, Rebecca Bullard, Flora Webster Brooks, Ruth S. Norman, Jane Spaulding, Karolyn Franklin, Florence Gordan, Leota Claire, Nancy Carper, and Ethel Davis; standing in the second row are, from the left, Mary Kimbrough, Cornella Wright, Lucenda Sanders, Hattie Clark, Vera Ford Powell, Carrie James Crichlow, E.A. McGhee, Lizzie Hopkins, Maude Wanzer, Inez Hall, Josephine Moore, Mary Carper Gray, and Ida Page; standing in the back row, from the left, are Flora Gardner, Nan Lou Stephenson, Sarah Bullard, Nina C. Gamble, Amy Hopkins, and Maude Clark Peters.

Members of the Charleston Woman’s Improvement League, n.d.

Hairstyle, Smile, Black, Human

Members of the Charleston Woman’s Improvement League, n.d.

Coat, Suit, Vintage clothing, Event

Members of the Charleston Woman’s Improvement League, 1957

Plant, Art, Building, Tints and shades

Banner with the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs' Motto. "Lifting as We Climb"

Product, Rectangle, Purple, Textile

The Charleston Woman’s Improvement League was founded by nine prominent local women: Mattie V. Lee, Fannie Cobb Carter, Blanche Jefferies Tyler, Nan Lou Stephenson, Mary Kimbrough, Mary L. Clark, Ammie Hopkins, Sarah Bullard, and Rebecca Bullard. The organization was established as a self-help civic organization that was open to any African American woman who was willing to work for a civic cause. 

The organization provided opportunities for Black women that they may not have found elsewhere in the community. The members had leadership roles and were highly involved in the decisions made on behalf of the organization. There was a purpose behind naming the group “Woman’s” instead of “Women’s." By using the singular form, emphasis was placed not only on the group, but also the individual’s obligation to improve themselves and the public. The club took their motto, “Lifting as We Climb,” from the National Association of Colored Women (NACW) to encourage members to work to improve others’ lives as well as their own.

Early on, the organization met in local churches. Under the leadership of President Spaulding, the group purchased a building on East Washington Street. The group hosted their meetings and activities in this building and rented it out to other community members for events.

The organization was involved in numerous community service project such as providing supplies to Black schools and hospitals, sponsoring scholarships, and compiling a resource guide for the local Black community. Wanting to expand opportunities for the next generation, the Charleston Woman’s Improvement League established programs for young girls. First established was the Polly Pigtail Club, followed by the League Teens. 

In 1998, the organization celebrated their 100th anniversary and is still operating today.

The Woman's Suffrage Movement:

The National Association of Colored Women (NACW) was founded in 1895 to provide an umbrella organization for African American women’s clubs. American segregation meant that African American women were not welcome in white women’s clubs, and had to form their own. For African American women, club work was not aimed only at gaining suffrage or pressuring for social justice legislation. Due to segregation, inequity, and violence, Black women focused on a wide range of social issues such as education, medical care, vocational training, and community services, and they focused on creating a community support system because they could not always rely on public institution or local governments. Women’s suffrage was a main interest of the NACW in addition to matters such as fighting Jim Crow laws, condemning racial violence, and other inequalities faced by the African American community in the United States.

The leadership of the NACW recognized the need to work in coordination with the National American Woman Suffrage Association on the cause of suffrage. Mary Church Terrell, one of the NACW founders, spoke before the NAWSA to urge the larger suffrage organization to push for equal suffrage for all women. Unfortunately, many white women’s suffrage organizations were either unwelcoming to African American women, had a problematic history with racial issues, or even argued for white women’s suffrage to further outweigh the vote of Black men and support white supremacy. The NAWSA accepted the racial prejudices of the southern states in order to produce a united national front to gain women’s suffrage. This meant that African American women were marginalized within the national suffrage movement and largely worked within their own communities and organization to support equal suffrage for Black men and women. 

Bickley, Ancella. "'Lifting as We Climb' Charleston Woman’s Improvement League." West Virginia Division of Culture and History. Web. 11 May 2015. http://www.wvculture.org/goldenseal/winter04/womens.html.

Bickley, Ancella R. “Lifting as We Climb.” Goldenseal 30 no. 4 (2004): 54-58.

Carle, Susan D. Defining the Struggle: National Racial Justice Organizing, 1880-1915. Oxford University Press, 2013.

Schwarz, Bob. "'Lifting as We Climb' Black Women's Group Celebrates 90th Anniversary." The Charleston Gazette 8 May 1988. Print. Marshall University Special Collections. 

White, Deborah Cray. Too Heavy A Load: Black Women in Defense of Themselves, 1894-1994. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1999. 

Image Sources(Click to expand)

"Home." Charleston Woman's Improvement League. Accessed February 14, 2022. https://cwilwv.com/.

"About Us." Charleston Woman's Improvement League. Accessed February 14, 2022. https://cwilwv.com/about-us.

"About Us." Charleston Woman's Improvement League. Accessed February 14, 2022. https://cwilwv.com/about-us.

"About Us." Charleston Woman's Improvement League. Accessed February 14, 2022. https://cwilwv.com/about-us.

"National Association of Colored Women's Clubs." Wikipedia. Accessed February 14, 2022.