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The
Mutual Improvement Club was an Oberlin community-based club for
black women organized and federated in 1913. At meetings, members
discussed topics such as home economics and improvement, sanitation,
education of children, bettering social conditions, and improvement
of the race. The officers for both years recorded here were Mrs.
Philip (Gertrude) Anderson, Mrs. John (Kitty) Berry, Miss Frankie
Robinson (1866-1936) of the Class of 1891, and Miss Annie Heavener
(Cowan), a Conservatory of Music student from 1910 to 1914.
The club’s motto, “Hand in hand, not one before the other,” attests
to the women’s commitment to learn by working together. In
many ways this organization modeled itself on the growing number
of women’s clubs formed during the “Progressive Era.”
The activities of the Mutual Improvement Club illustrate a combined
interest in practical matters of the home and in improving the
situation of all in the community, as well as a desire to discuss
matters of
political and historical significance. Typical of this sentiment
is a quote within the yearbook, which reads, “No race can rise
any higher than its women.” In 1913 and 1914, the club held
debates in which the women resolved in the affirmative “that
women Should Vote” and “that Lincoln was the colored
man’s best friend.” Perhaps the best example of the combination
of home economics and politics occurs at the end of the 1914 yearbook,
which states “The Club will meet for sewing on the third Thursday
of each month from two to four. At these meetings chapters from Dr.
[Henry Churchill] King’s ‘Rational Living’ [1905]
and Kelley Miller’s ‘Race Adjustment’ [1909] will
be read and discussed.”
The Mutual Improvement Club was probably affiliated with the
Oberlin Council of Colored Women, which formed in 1916 with the
object
of “cooperation
and social uplift.” Additionally some of the older women of
the Mutual Improvement Club were, or had been, members of First Congregational
Church, Oberlin.
The records in this modest collection consist of two yearbooks
printed in 1913 and 1914. No other documenting material is extant
for this
club.
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