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  7. Black Women: Achievements Against the Odds

Anacostia Community Museum

Black Women: Achievements Against the Odds

October 21, 1984 – June 30, 1985

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African American women have made significant contributions to the United States and the world for more than three centuries. Learn about 120 women whose stories are organized by areas of accomplishment, including science, math, religion, literature, medicine, civil rights, education, law, music, business, art, journalism, sports, and government. The women range from world-famous to little-known—from poet Phillis Wheatley and Congresswoman Barbara Jordan to business executive Eartha M.M. White and Clara Burrill Bruce, the first female editor-in-chief of the Boston University Law Review.

A narrated slide show, Sketches from Life, features abolitionists Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, and Ida B. Wells Barnett; Maggie Lena Walker, the first black female banker; Rosa Parks, who refused to sit at the back of the bus in Montgomery, Alabama; and Marjorie McKenzie Lawson, appointed a D.C. municipal judge by President John F. Kennedy. Films focused on Maya Angelou, Lorraine Hansberry, Mahalia Jackson, Leontyne Price, and D.C. artist/art educator Alma Thomas can be viewed in the exhibition area.

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Dr. Anna Arnold Hedgeman, Betsy Graves Reyneau, 1945. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. Gift of the Harmon Foundation. © Peter Edward Fayard


Anacostia Community Museum
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Anacostia Community Museum arrow-right

Anacostia Neighborhood Museum, 2405 Martin Luther King, Jr. Ave., SE

Tickets

ticket Free, no passes needed

Hours

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Closed until late spring
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily
Closed Dec. 25

Location

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1901 Fort Place, SE
Washington, DC

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