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Sadie T. M. Alexander

Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander (January 2, 1898 – November 1, 1989) was a pioneering Black professional and civil rights activist of the early-to-mid-20th century. In 1921, Mossell Alexander was the second African-American woman to receive a Ph.D. and the first one to receive one in economics in the United States. In 1927, she was first Black woman to receive a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School and went on to become the first Black woman to practice law in the state.[1] She was also the first national president of Delta Sigma Theta sorority, serving from 1919 to 1923.[2][3]

Sadie T. M. Alexander
Alexander upon receiving her PhD
Born
Sadie Tanner Mossell

(1898-01-02)January 2, 1898
DiedNovember 1, 1989(1989-11-01) (aged 91)
EducationUniversity of Pennsylvania (AB, AM, PhD, LLB)
Spouse
(m. 1923)
Children2
Parent(s)Aaron Albert Mossell II (father)
Mary Louisa Tanner (mother)

Mossell Alexander and her husband were active in civil rights, both in Philadelphia and nationally. In 1946 she was appointed to the President's Committee on Civil Rights established by Harry Truman. In 1952 she was appointed to the city's Commission on Human Relations, serving through 1968. She was a founding member of the national Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (1963). She served on the board of the National Urban League for 25 years. U.S. President Jimmy Carter named her in 1979 to chair the decennial White House Conference on Aging, an appointment later withdrawn by Richard Schweiker, President Ronald Reagan's Secretary of Health and Human Services.[4]

Biography edit

 
Mossell in 1918

Sadie Tanner Mossell was born on January 2, 1898, in Philadelphia to Aaron Albert Mossell II and Mary Louisa Tanner (born 1867).[5] Mossell attended high school in Washington, D.C. at the M Street School, now known as Dunbar High School, graduating in 1915.[6][7] She was able to do so because she stayed with her uncle Dr. Lewis B Moore and step aunt at their home on the campus of Howard University. [8]

Mossell returned to Philadelphia to study at the School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania, graduating in 1918. There, she faced numerous hardships, due to her race and gender, such as poor advising, false accusations of plagiarism, and other students stealing her intellectual property.[9] She pursued graduate work in economics, also at Penn, earning her master's in 1919. Awarded the Francis Sergeant Pepper fellowship, she was able to continue her studies and in 1921 became the first African-American woman in the United States to earn a PhD from an American university.[10][11][12]

Finding it difficult to get professorship work in Philadelphia as an African-American even with her doctorate,[4] Mossell decided to take an actuarial job with the black-owned North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company in Durham, North Carolina, and worked there for two years.

In 1919, she was elected the first national President of Delta Sigma Theta. Mossell Alexander also served as the legal advisor to Delta Sigma Theta sorority for 35 years.[13] She was in contact with the Alpha Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta since 1915 when she arrived at the University of Pennsylvania. However, she needed five students to charter a chapter of the sorority, which was not possible until 1918. In March 1918, the Gamma Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta was established with Mossell as its first President. At the request of the Alpha Chapter, the four existing chapters of Delta Sigma Theta were called to convene at Howard University in December 1919. The sorority planned to host their meetings in the women's dormitory on campus until Mossell's uncle Lewis Baxter Moore offered his office as a meeting place. At this convention, the Grand Chapter of the sorority was established, taking the sorority from a loose federation of chapters to a national body. Under Mossell's leadership the Sorority expanded to new locales in the West, the South, and further into the Midwest and Northeast. She also initiated Delta's first national program, May Week.[14]

In 1923, Mossell married Raymond Pace Alexander shortly after he was admitted to the bar, then returned with him to Philadelphia. Mossell received job offers from several Black colleges and universities, but none of them was located in Philadelphia, and she had no desire to leave her new family. So she stayed home for a year, did volunteer work, and eventually entered law school.[4]

She was the first African-American woman admitted to the University of Pennsylvania Law School.[15] While a law student, the dean attempted to deny her participation on the law review, but her fellow students – including Philip Werner Amram, who was then editor-in-chief of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review – insisted that she be allowed this honor, which she had earned.[16][17] In 1927, she was Penn's first African-American woman graduate, and the first to be admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar.[6]

Mossell Alexander practiced law from 1927 until her retirement in 1982. Upon admission to the Bar, she joined her husband's law practice as partner, specializing in estate and family law. They both were active in civil rights law as well. In 1928 she was the first African-American woman appointed as Assistant City Solicitor for the City of Philadelphia, serving to 1930. She was reappointed from 1934 to 1938. From 1943 to 1947, she was the first woman to serve as secretary of the National Bar Association.[15] She was appointed to the Commission on Human Relations of the City of Philadelphia, serving from 1952 to 1968. In 1959, when her husband was appointed to the Court of Common Pleas in Philadelphia, she opened her own law office. She continued to practice law independently until her husband's death in 1974.[4] In 1976, she joined the firm of Atkinson, Myers, and Archie as a general counsel, where she remained until her retirement.

Mossell Alexander died on November 1, 1989, at Cathedral Village in Andorra, Philadelphia, from pneumonia as a complication from Alzheimer's disease.[2][3][1] She was buried in West Laurel Hill Cemetery.

Family edit

 
Sadie Alexander in 1982

Her maternal grandfather was Benjamin Tucker Tanner (1835–1923), a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) and editor of the Christian Recorder.[18] Bishop Tanner and his wife Sarah Elizabeth Tanner had seven children, including Henry Ossawa Tanner (1859–1937), who became a noted painter, and Hallie Tanner Johnson, the first female physician to practice medicine in Alabama[4] and who established the Nurses' School and Hospital at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama.[6]

Her father, Aaron Albert Mossell II (1863-1951), was the first African-American graduate of the University of Pennsylvania School of Law and practiced as a lawyer in Philadelphia. In 1899, when his daughter Sadie was a one year old, he abandoned his family and moved to Wales.[19] Her uncle, Nathan Francis Mossell (1856–1946) was the first African-American graduate of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.[6]

Mossell Alexander's siblings include Aaron Albert Mossell III (1893–1975), who became a pharmacist; and Elizabeth Mossell (1894–1975), who became a Dean of Women at Virginia State College, a historically black college.[6]

During her high school years, Mossell lived in Washington, DC, with her uncle, Lewis Baxter Moore, who was dean at Howard University and her step aunt Lavinia W. Moore.[20]

On November 29, 1923, Sadie Tanner Mossell married Raymond Pace Alexander (1897–1974) in her parents' home on Diamond Street in North Philadelphia, with the ceremony performed by her father.[citation needed] Alexander, whose parents were formerly enslaved, grew up in Philadelphia. He attended and graduated from Central High School (1917, valedictorian), Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania (1920), and Harvard Law School (1923). At the time of their marriage, he had established a law practice in Philadelphia.

Sadie and Raymond had four premature children, with only the last two surviving. They were able to raise two daughters:[4] Mary Elizabeth Alexander (born 1934), who married Melvin Brown; and Rae Pace Alexander (born 1937), who earned a Ph.D. and married Archie C. Epps III. After her divorce with Epps, in 1971 Rae Pace Alexander married Thomas Minter, and they had two sons together.[21]

Views and activities edit

 
This graph shows the inequality of real median US household income by race: 1967 to 2011, in 2011 dollars.[22]

According to Nina Banks,[23] Alexander's opposition to racial oppression was within a tradition of 19th century scholars Frederick Douglass and T. Thomas Fortune, and with later scholars W.E.B. DuBois and A. Philip Randolph. Alexander's focus was frequently on racial and economic justice for the working class, especially for working men and women. However, unlike Dubois or Randolph, Alexander never embraced socialism. Alexander also can be contrasted with Howard University radicals Ralph Bunche, E. Franklin Frazier, and fellow black economist Abram Harris. For example, Harris wrote that the fundamental problems facing blacks could be overcome through multi-racial labor organizing and did not support direct action for civil rights until blacks had achieved economic power. Alexander, on the other hand, was outspoken against white dominance in political, social, and economic spheres.[23]

Alexander's work and views are recorded in speeches kept in the University of Pennsylvania archives. Among her earliest works are from the 1920s and discuss black workers in the US economy. In 1930, Alexander published an article, "Negro Women in Our Economic Life", which was published in Urban League's Opportunity magazine advocating black women's employment, particularly in industrial jobs. Alexander generally supported the Republican Party, suspicious of the control of conservative southern whites over the Democratic Party, although she also criticized Republican political appointments, as well as what she saw as uneven benefits of the New Deal which did not do enough to help blacks who were most hurt by the great depression. During World War II, Alexander saw similarities in a rise in racial violence and discrimination in the US as paralleling the treatment of Jews in Germany. Near the end of the war, she supported integrating labor unions to increase their bargaining power once the war economy slowed and industrial employment moved toward pre-war levels. Her interest in labor economic issues extended to advocating for government regulation to smooth fluctuations in the business cycle, modification of tariffs, regulation of public utilities, and regulation of securities and securities markets.[23]

After the war she was appointed to Truman's Presidential Committee on Human Rights and shifted her focus to civil and human rights. Evidence in the archives suggests that her focus was in this direction for over a decade. In 1949, Alexander and six other Philadelphians formed the Citizens' Council on Democratic Rights to "protect and extend the enjoyment of human rights." In 1951, joined by Henry W. Sawyer, the Council became the Greater Philadelphia Branch of the American Civil Liberties Union; Alexander continued to serve on that organization's board of directors for many years.[24] In 1963 she gave a speech to the Annual Conference of Commission on Human Rights and she returned to the topic of economic justice, advocating for universal employment.[23]

In a 1981 interview she did with the Geriatric Nursing journal about her position as chair of the WHCoA, Alexander expressed her disapproval of anti-abortion legislation. She advocated for better benefits for nurses and stressed their vitality to the healthcare system. She also expressed that everyone, no matter their age or educational level, can add value to the economy with the proper support.

Legacy and honors edit

 
Penn Alexander public elementary school, 2016
  • In 1948, the National Urban League featured Alexander as "Woman of the Year" in its comic book of Negro Heroes.[6]
  • In 1970, Alexander was finally granted membership into Phi Beta Kappa, an honor she had been denied as an undergraduate at University of Pennsylvania.[25]
  • In 1974, Alexander was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Pennsylvania, her first of seven such honors. She received the degree at University of Pennsylvania Law School.[15]
  • In 1980, Alexander received the Distinguished Service Award from the University of Pennsylvania's Law School.[4]
  • An elementary school in West Philadelphia, the Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander University of Pennsylvania Partnership School ("Penn Alexander"), is named after her. The public school was developed in partnership with the university, which supports the school financially and academically.[26]
  • The Raymond Pace and Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Professorship at the University of Pennsylvania is named in her honor.[27]
  • In 2018, The Sadie Collective, an organization for Black Women in quantitative fields was created in her honor.[9] It hosted the first U.S. conference for Black Women in Economics in 2019, drawing attention from press outlets such as NPR, Forbes, Bloomberg, and Quartz as well as notable economists like Janet Yellen, former Chair of the Federal Reserve System, and James Poterba, current president and CEO of the NBER. The conference was attended by her daughter, Dr. Rae Pace Alexander-Minter, and took place at Mathematica Policy Research's Washington, D.C., office.[28]
  • In 2018, Philadelphia City Councilwoman Cherelle Parker proposed a measure to erect a statue of Alexander.[29]
  • On February 24, 2021, Alexander's life and accomplishments were the subject of an episode of the podcast Broads You Should Know[30]
  • On April 27, 2022, Alexander was named a distinguished fellow by the American Economic Association for her contributions to economic equality and civil rights.[31][32][33] She is the first and only economist to posthumously receive the award.[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Lawyer Sadie Alexander, a Black pioneer dies at 91". Associated Press. November 3, 1989. Retrieved September 10, 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Sadie T. M. Alexander, 91, dies; lawyer and civil rights advocate". The New York Times. November 3, 1989. Retrieved August 17, 2014.
  3. ^ a b "Sadie T.M. Alexander". The Washington Post. November 5, 1989.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "A lively leader for the WHCoA". Geriatric Nursing. 2 (3): 233–234. May 1, 1981. doi:10.1016/S0197-4572(81)80093-6. ISSN 0197-4572.
  5. ^ Who's who in colored America. New York: Who's Who in Colored America Corp. 1927. OCLC 644049795.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Alexander Family Collection". University of Pennsylvania University Archives and Records Center. Retrieved October 26, 2010.
  7. ^ Sowell, Thomas (2002). Lazear, Edward P. (ed.). The Education of Minority Children. Hoover Institution Press. pp. 79–92. ISBN 978-0-8179-2892-6. Retrieved October 26, 2010.
  8. ^ Giddings, Paula (1988). In Search of Sisterhood: Delta Sigma Theta and the challenge of the Black sorority movement (3 ed.). New York: Harper Collins. p. 1162.
  9. ^ a b "The Alexander Technique", The Economist, vol. 437, no. 9225, December 19, 2020, pp. 46-47.
  10. ^ Banks, Nina; Whatley, Warren C. (2022). "A Nation of Laws, and Race Laws". Journal of Economic Literature. 60 (2): 427–453. doi:10.1257/jel.20211689. ISSN 0022-0515. S2CID 249328541.
  11. ^ Malveaux, Julianne (1991). "Missed Opportunity: Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander and the Economics Profession". The American Economic Review. 81 (2): 307–310. ISSN 0002-8282. JSTOR 2006875.
  12. ^ "Negress Gets Ph.D at Pennsylvania". The Evening World. No. 21, 767. June 15, 1921. Retrieved May 26, 2021.
  13. ^ Malveaux, Julianne (December 13, 1996), "Missed Opportunity", A Different Vision, Routledge, doi:10.4324/9780203012642.ch6, ISBN 978-0-415-09590-7, retrieved May 6, 2021
  14. ^ Giddings 1998, op. cit., p. 83.
  15. ^ a b c "Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander", University of Pennsylvania Almanac, accessed March 31, 2011
  16. ^ Snyder, Susan (April 3, 2022). "Black women now lead three of Penn's prestigious law journals. They talk about what other change they'd like to see". www.inquirer.com. Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  17. ^ Smith, Jr., J. Clay (1999). Emancipation: The Making of the Black Lawyer, 1844-1944. Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812216851.
  18. ^ Walker, Clarence E.; Seraile, William (June 2000). "Fire in His Heart: Bishop Benjamin Tucker Tanner and the A.M.E. Church". The Journal of American History. 87 (1): 214. doi:10.2307/2567957. ISSN 0021-8723. JSTOR 2567957.
  19. ^ "Sadie Alexander Biography at Black History Now". August 29, 2011. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  20. ^ 1903 Marriage: "Washington, D.C., U.S., Compiled Marriage Index, 1830-1921" Ancestry Record 60261 #474681
  21. ^ Martin, Douglas (May 26, 2009). "Thomas Minter, 84, New York and Federal Education Official, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved May 27, 2009.
  22. ^ DeNavas-Walt, Carmen; Proctor, Bernadette D.; Smith, Jessica C. (September 2012). "Real Median Household Income by Race and Hispanic Origin: 1967 to 2010" (PDF). Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2011. U.S. Census Bureau. p. 8.
  23. ^ a b c d Nina Banks, The Black Worker, Economic Justice and the Speeches of Sadie T.M. Alexander. Review of Social Economy, Vol. LXVI, No. 2, June 2008 p 139-161 available as of November 1, 2018 at https://www.jstor.org/stable/29770460
  24. ^ Shuford, Reggie (November 2019). "A Relatively Brief History of the ACLU of Pennsylvania". ACLU Pennsylvania. Retrieved September 16, 2021.
  25. ^ Garner, Carla (October 29, 2010). "Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander (1898-1989) •". Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  26. ^ "With All Due Respect". Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander: University of Pennsylvania, PH.D, 1921, LLD 1927. 15 (1).
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  28. ^ "The Sadie T.M. Alexander Conference for Economics and Related Fields". Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  29. ^ D'Onofrio, Michael (October 23, 2018). "Statue for lawyer, civil rights advocate long overdue, officials say". The Philadelphia Tribune. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  30. ^ Broads You Should Know (2021). "Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander".
  31. ^ "American Economic Association". www.aeaweb.org. Retrieved January 30, 2023.
  32. ^ "Trailblazing Penn alumna Sadie T.M. Alexander gets posthumous honor". Penn Today. May 2, 2022. Retrieved January 30, 2023.
  33. ^ "American Economic Association". www.aeaweb.org. Retrieved January 30, 2023.
  34. ^ "NBER Research Associates Honored by AEA". NBER. Retrieved January 30, 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Banks, Nina. 2022. "Sadie T. M. Alexander: Black Women and a "Taste of Freedom in the Economic World", Journal of Economic Perspectives 36(4): 205–220.
  • Banks, Nina; Whatley, Warren C. (2022). "A Nation of Laws, and Race Laws". Journal of Economic Literature. 60 (2): 427–453
  • Mack, Kenneth W., (2012). Representing the Race: The Creation of the Civil Rights Lawyer (2012). ISBN 978-0-674-04687-0.
  • Mack, Kenneth W., (2002) "A Social History of Everyday Practice: Sadie T.M. Alexander and the Incorporation of Black Women into the American Legal Profession, 1925-60", Cornell Law Review, Vol. 87, p. 1405 A Social History of Everyday Practice: Sadie T.M. Alexander and the Incorporation of Black Women into the American Legal Profession, 1925-60
  • Nier, Charles Lewis. (1998) "Sweet are the Uses of Adversity: The Civil rights Activism of Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander", Temple Political and Civil Rights Law Review 8, #59
  • Obituaries: New York Times and Philadelphia Inquirer, November 3, 1989.

External links edit

  • Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander material in the Alexander family papers, 1817-2005 (bulk 1925-1983) at the University of Pennsylvania University Archives and Records Center

sadie, alexander, sadie, tanner, mossell, alexander, january, 1898, november, 1989, pioneering, black, professional, civil, rights, activist, early, 20th, century, 1921, mossell, alexander, second, african, american, woman, receive, first, receive, economics, . Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander January 2 1898 November 1 1989 was a pioneering Black professional and civil rights activist of the early to mid 20th century In 1921 Mossell Alexander was the second African American woman to receive a Ph D and the first one to receive one in economics in the United States In 1927 she was first Black woman to receive a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School and went on to become the first Black woman to practice law in the state 1 She was also the first national president of Delta Sigma Theta sorority serving from 1919 to 1923 2 3 Sadie T M AlexanderAlexander upon receiving her PhDBornSadie Tanner Mossell 1898 01 02 January 2 1898Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedNovember 1 1989 1989 11 01 aged 91 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S EducationUniversity of Pennsylvania AB AM PhD LLB SpouseRaymond Pace Alexander m 1923 wbr Children2Parent s Aaron Albert Mossell II father Mary Louisa Tanner mother Mossell Alexander and her husband were active in civil rights both in Philadelphia and nationally In 1946 she was appointed to the President s Committee on Civil Rights established by Harry Truman In 1952 she was appointed to the city s Commission on Human Relations serving through 1968 She was a founding member of the national Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law 1963 She served on the board of the National Urban League for 25 years U S President Jimmy Carter named her in 1979 to chair the decennial White House Conference on Aging an appointment later withdrawn by Richard Schweiker President Ronald Reagan s Secretary of Health and Human Services 4 Contents 1 Biography 2 Family 3 Views and activities 4 Legacy and honors 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography edit nbsp Mossell in 1918Sadie Tanner Mossell was born on January 2 1898 in Philadelphia to Aaron Albert Mossell II and Mary Louisa Tanner born 1867 5 Mossell attended high school in Washington D C at the M Street School now known as Dunbar High School graduating in 1915 6 7 She was able to do so because she stayed with her uncle Dr Lewis B Moore and step aunt at their home on the campus of Howard University 8 Mossell returned to Philadelphia to study at the School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania graduating in 1918 There she faced numerous hardships due to her race and gender such as poor advising false accusations of plagiarism and other students stealing her intellectual property 9 She pursued graduate work in economics also at Penn earning her master s in 1919 Awarded the Francis Sergeant Pepper fellowship she was able to continue her studies and in 1921 became the first African American woman in the United States to earn a PhD from an American university 10 11 12 Finding it difficult to get professorship work in Philadelphia as an African American even with her doctorate 4 Mossell decided to take an actuarial job with the black owned North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company in Durham North Carolina and worked there for two years In 1919 she was elected the first national President of Delta Sigma Theta Mossell Alexander also served as the legal advisor to Delta Sigma Theta sorority for 35 years 13 She was in contact with the Alpha Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta since 1915 when she arrived at the University of Pennsylvania However she needed five students to charter a chapter of the sorority which was not possible until 1918 In March 1918 the Gamma Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta was established with Mossell as its first President At the request of the Alpha Chapter the four existing chapters of Delta Sigma Theta were called to convene at Howard University in December 1919 The sorority planned to host their meetings in the women s dormitory on campus until Mossell s uncle Lewis Baxter Moore offered his office as a meeting place At this convention the Grand Chapter of the sorority was established taking the sorority from a loose federation of chapters to a national body Under Mossell s leadership the Sorority expanded to new locales in the West the South and further into the Midwest and Northeast She also initiated Delta s first national program May Week 14 In 1923 Mossell married Raymond Pace Alexander shortly after he was admitted to the bar then returned with him to Philadelphia Mossell received job offers from several Black colleges and universities but none of them was located in Philadelphia and she had no desire to leave her new family So she stayed home for a year did volunteer work and eventually entered law school 4 She was the first African American woman admitted to the University of Pennsylvania Law School 15 While a law student the dean attempted to deny her participation on the law review but her fellow students including Philip Werner Amram who was then editor in chief of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review insisted that she be allowed this honor which she had earned 16 17 In 1927 she was Penn s first African American woman graduate and the first to be admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar 6 Mossell Alexander practiced law from 1927 until her retirement in 1982 Upon admission to the Bar she joined her husband s law practice as partner specializing in estate and family law They both were active in civil rights law as well In 1928 she was the first African American woman appointed as Assistant City Solicitor for the City of Philadelphia serving to 1930 She was reappointed from 1934 to 1938 From 1943 to 1947 she was the first woman to serve as secretary of the National Bar Association 15 She was appointed to the Commission on Human Relations of the City of Philadelphia serving from 1952 to 1968 In 1959 when her husband was appointed to the Court of Common Pleas in Philadelphia she opened her own law office She continued to practice law independently until her husband s death in 1974 4 In 1976 she joined the firm of Atkinson Myers and Archie as a general counsel where she remained until her retirement Mossell Alexander died on November 1 1989 at Cathedral Village in Andorra Philadelphia from pneumonia as a complication from Alzheimer s disease 2 3 1 She was buried in West Laurel Hill Cemetery Family edit nbsp Sadie Alexander in 1982Her maternal grandfather was Benjamin Tucker Tanner 1835 1923 a bishop in the African Methodist Episcopal Church AME and editor of the Christian Recorder 18 Bishop Tanner and his wife Sarah Elizabeth Tanner had seven children including Henry Ossawa Tanner 1859 1937 who became a noted painter and Hallie Tanner Johnson the first female physician to practice medicine in Alabama 4 and who established the Nurses School and Hospital at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama 6 Her father Aaron Albert Mossell II 1863 1951 was the first African American graduate of the University of Pennsylvania School of Law and practiced as a lawyer in Philadelphia In 1899 when his daughter Sadie was a one year old he abandoned his family and moved to Wales 19 Her uncle Nathan Francis Mossell 1856 1946 was the first African American graduate of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine 6 Mossell Alexander s siblings include Aaron Albert Mossell III 1893 1975 who became a pharmacist and Elizabeth Mossell 1894 1975 who became a Dean of Women at Virginia State College a historically black college 6 During her high school years Mossell lived in Washington DC with her uncle Lewis Baxter Moore who was dean at Howard University and her step aunt Lavinia W Moore 20 On November 29 1923 Sadie Tanner Mossell married Raymond Pace Alexander 1897 1974 in her parents home on Diamond Street in North Philadelphia with the ceremony performed by her father citation needed Alexander whose parents were formerly enslaved grew up in Philadelphia He attended and graduated from Central High School 1917 valedictorian Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania 1920 and Harvard Law School 1923 At the time of their marriage he had established a law practice in Philadelphia Sadie and Raymond had four premature children with only the last two surviving They were able to raise two daughters 4 Mary Elizabeth Alexander born 1934 who married Melvin Brown and Rae Pace Alexander born 1937 who earned a Ph D and married Archie C Epps III After her divorce with Epps in 1971 Rae Pace Alexander married Thomas Minter and they had two sons together 21 Views and activities edit nbsp This graph shows the inequality of real median US household income by race 1967 to 2011 in 2011 dollars 22 According to Nina Banks 23 Alexander s opposition to racial oppression was within a tradition of 19th century scholars Frederick Douglass and T Thomas Fortune and with later scholars W E B DuBois and A Philip Randolph Alexander s focus was frequently on racial and economic justice for the working class especially for working men and women However unlike Dubois or Randolph Alexander never embraced socialism Alexander also can be contrasted with Howard University radicals Ralph Bunche E Franklin Frazier and fellow black economist Abram Harris For example Harris wrote that the fundamental problems facing blacks could be overcome through multi racial labor organizing and did not support direct action for civil rights until blacks had achieved economic power Alexander on the other hand was outspoken against white dominance in political social and economic spheres 23 Alexander s work and views are recorded in speeches kept in the University of Pennsylvania archives Among her earliest works are from the 1920s and discuss black workers in the US economy In 1930 Alexander published an article Negro Women in Our Economic Life which was published in Urban League s Opportunity magazine advocating black women s employment particularly in industrial jobs Alexander generally supported the Republican Party suspicious of the control of conservative southern whites over the Democratic Party although she also criticized Republican political appointments as well as what she saw as uneven benefits of the New Deal which did not do enough to help blacks who were most hurt by the great depression During World War II Alexander saw similarities in a rise in racial violence and discrimination in the US as paralleling the treatment of Jews in Germany Near the end of the war she supported integrating labor unions to increase their bargaining power once the war economy slowed and industrial employment moved toward pre war levels Her interest in labor economic issues extended to advocating for government regulation to smooth fluctuations in the business cycle modification of tariffs regulation of public utilities and regulation of securities and securities markets 23 After the war she was appointed to Truman s Presidential Committee on Human Rights and shifted her focus to civil and human rights Evidence in the archives suggests that her focus was in this direction for over a decade In 1949 Alexander and six other Philadelphians formed the Citizens Council on Democratic Rights to protect and extend the enjoyment of human rights In 1951 joined by Henry W Sawyer the Council became the Greater Philadelphia Branch of the American Civil Liberties Union Alexander continued to serve on that organization s board of directors for many years 24 In 1963 she gave a speech to the Annual Conference of Commission on Human Rights and she returned to the topic of economic justice advocating for universal employment 23 In a 1981 interview she did with the Geriatric Nursing journal about her position as chair of the WHCoA Alexander expressed her disapproval of anti abortion legislation She advocated for better benefits for nurses and stressed their vitality to the healthcare system She also expressed that everyone no matter their age or educational level can add value to the economy with the proper support Legacy and honors edit nbsp Penn Alexander public elementary school 2016In 1948 the National Urban League featured Alexander as Woman of the Year in its comic book of Negro Heroes 6 In 1970 Alexander was finally granted membership into Phi Beta Kappa an honor she had been denied as an undergraduate at University of Pennsylvania 25 In 1974 Alexander was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Pennsylvania her first of seven such honors She received the degree at University of Pennsylvania Law School 15 In 1980 Alexander received the Distinguished Service Award from the University of Pennsylvania s Law School 4 An elementary school in West Philadelphia the Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander University of Pennsylvania Partnership School Penn Alexander is named after her The public school was developed in partnership with the university which supports the school financially and academically 26 The Raymond Pace and Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Professorship at the University of Pennsylvania is named in her honor 27 In 2018 The Sadie Collective an organization for Black Women in quantitative fields was created in her honor 9 It hosted the first U S conference for Black Women in Economics in 2019 drawing attention from press outlets such as NPR Forbes Bloomberg and Quartz as well as notable economists like Janet Yellen former Chair of the Federal Reserve System and James Poterba current president and CEO of the NBER The conference was attended by her daughter Dr Rae Pace Alexander Minter and took place at Mathematica Policy Research s Washington D C office 28 In 2018 Philadelphia City Councilwoman Cherelle Parker proposed a measure to erect a statue of Alexander 29 On February 24 2021 Alexander s life and accomplishments were the subject of an episode of the podcast Broads You Should Know 30 On April 27 2022 Alexander was named a distinguished fellow by the American Economic Association for her contributions to economic equality and civil rights 31 32 33 She is the first and only economist to posthumously receive the award 34 See also editList of first women lawyers and judges in PennsylvaniaReferences edit a b Lawyer Sadie Alexander a Black pioneer dies at 91 Associated Press November 3 1989 Retrieved September 10 2015 a b Sadie T M Alexander 91 dies lawyer and civil rights advocate The New York Times November 3 1989 Retrieved August 17 2014 a b Sadie T M Alexander The Washington Post November 5 1989 a b c d e f g A lively leader for the WHCoA Geriatric Nursing 2 3 233 234 May 1 1981 doi 10 1016 S0197 4572 81 80093 6 ISSN 0197 4572 Who s who in colored America New York Who s Who in Colored America Corp 1927 OCLC 644049795 a b c d e f Alexander Family Collection University of Pennsylvania University Archives and Records Center Retrieved October 26 2010 Sowell Thomas 2002 Lazear Edward P ed The Education of Minority Children Hoover Institution Press pp 79 92 ISBN 978 0 8179 2892 6 Retrieved October 26 2010 Giddings Paula 1988 In Search of Sisterhood Delta Sigma Theta and the challenge of the Black sorority movement 3 ed New York Harper Collins p 1162 a b The Alexander Technique The Economist vol 437 no 9225 December 19 2020 pp 46 47 Banks Nina Whatley Warren C 2022 A Nation of Laws and Race Laws Journal of Economic Literature 60 2 427 453 doi 10 1257 jel 20211689 ISSN 0022 0515 S2CID 249328541 Malveaux Julianne 1991 Missed Opportunity Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander and the Economics Profession The American Economic Review 81 2 307 310 ISSN 0002 8282 JSTOR 2006875 Negress Gets Ph D at Pennsylvania The Evening World No 21 767 June 15 1921 Retrieved May 26 2021 Malveaux Julianne December 13 1996 Missed Opportunity A Different Vision Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203012642 ch6 ISBN 978 0 415 09590 7 retrieved May 6 2021 Giddings 1998 op cit p 83 a b c Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander University of Pennsylvania Almanac accessed March 31 2011 Snyder Susan April 3 2022 Black women now lead three of Penn s prestigious law journals They talk about what other change they d like to see www inquirer com Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved April 7 2022 Smith Jr J Clay 1999 Emancipation The Making of the Black Lawyer 1844 1944 Philadelphia Univ of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812216851 Walker Clarence E Seraile William June 2000 Fire in His Heart Bishop Benjamin Tucker Tanner and the A M E Church The Journal of American History 87 1 214 doi 10 2307 2567957 ISSN 0021 8723 JSTOR 2567957 Sadie Alexander Biography at Black History Now August 29 2011 Retrieved June 8 2020 1903 Marriage Washington D C U S Compiled Marriage Index 1830 1921 Ancestry Record 60261 474681 Martin Douglas May 26 2009 Thomas Minter 84 New York and Federal Education Official Dies The New York Times Retrieved May 27 2009 DeNavas Walt Carmen Proctor Bernadette D Smith Jessica C September 2012 Real Median Household Income by Race and Hispanic Origin 1967 to 2010 PDF Income Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States 2011 U S Census Bureau p 8 a b c d Nina Banks The Black Worker Economic Justice and the Speeches of Sadie T M Alexander Review of Social Economy Vol LXVI No 2 June 2008 p 139 161 available as of November 1 2018 at https www jstor org stable 29770460 Shuford Reggie November 2019 A Relatively Brief History of the ACLU of Pennsylvania ACLU Pennsylvania Retrieved September 16 2021 Garner Carla October 29 2010 Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander 1898 1989 Retrieved June 8 2020 With All Due Respect Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander University of Pennsylvania PH D 1921 LLD 1927 15 1 Dorothy Roberts Appointed Penn Integrates Knowledge Professor Penn Law News amp Stories Archived from the original on July 18 2012 Retrieved May 1 2012 The Sadie T M Alexander Conference for Economics and Related Fields Retrieved June 8 2020 D Onofrio Michael October 23 2018 Statue for lawyer civil rights advocate long overdue officials say The Philadelphia Tribune Retrieved June 8 2020 Broads You Should Know 2021 Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander American Economic Association www aeaweb org Retrieved January 30 2023 Trailblazing Penn alumna Sadie T M Alexander gets posthumous honor Penn Today May 2 2022 Retrieved January 30 2023 American Economic Association www aeaweb org Retrieved January 30 2023 NBER Research Associates Honored by AEA NBER Retrieved January 30 2023 Further reading editBanks Nina 2022 Sadie T M Alexander Black Women and a Taste of Freedom in the Economic World Journal of Economic Perspectives 36 4 205 220 Banks Nina Whatley Warren C 2022 A Nation of Laws and Race Laws Journal of Economic Literature 60 2 427 453 Mack Kenneth W 2012 Representing the Race The Creation of the Civil Rights Lawyer 2012 ISBN 978 0 674 04687 0 Mack Kenneth W 2002 A Social History of Everyday Practice Sadie T M Alexander and the Incorporation of Black Women into the American Legal Profession 1925 60 Cornell Law Review Vol 87 p 1405 A Social History of Everyday Practice Sadie T M Alexander and the Incorporation of Black Women into the American Legal Profession 1925 60 Nier Charles Lewis 1998 Sweet are the Uses of Adversity The Civil rights Activism of Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander Temple Political and Civil Rights Law Review 8 59 Obituaries New York Times and Philadelphia Inquirer November 3 1989 External links editSadie Tanner Mossell Alexander material in the Alexander family papers 1817 2005 bulk 1925 1983 at the University of Pennsylvania University Archives and Records Center Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sadie T M Alexander amp oldid 1215406403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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