Susan Frazier

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Susan Elizabeth Frazier was a late 19th-century and early 20th-century thought-leader on the issues of women's and African American's rights and capacity. She was a very active and accomplished substitute teacher in New York City Public Schools at a time when such opportunities for African American women were very limited. On February 16, 1892 she delivered an address to an audience of the Brooklyn Literary Union, called "Some Afro American Women of Mark" which has been referenced from its time of first presentation, through to contemporary books and dissertations today. In 1894 Frazier applied for the position of New York City public school teacher, at a school with white students. Later that year she received a request to meet in person with School 58 principal F. W. James. Upon meeting her, James declined to appoint her due to her African heritage, saying such an appointment could "cause trouble." At the time, African-Americans were restricted to teaching only other African Americans. She is quoted as saying at the time, “There are colored teachers in the schools of Brooklyn, Jersey City, Boston and other cities, and I think it time that the color line was obliterated in appointing a teacher in New York.” So she took her case to the courts, which initially rejected her plea in 1895. But she was eventually appointed May 26, 1896. During World War I she was president of the Women’s Auxiliary of the Old Fifteenth National Guard, an African American troop, and continued to work with the 369th Infantry as it became to be known. She took a trip to England, Belgium and France in 1919. Upon her death, full military honors were held in the 369th Regiment Armory and her casket was draped with the American flag. She was the great-granddaughter of African American Revolutionary War Veteran Andrew Frazier. Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

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