Ione Wood Gibbs Explained

Ione Wood Gibbs
Birth Name:Ione Elveda Wood
Birth Date: 1871
Birth Place:Burlington, New Jersey, U.S.
Death Date:June 1923
Death Place:Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Nationality:American
Other Names:Ione E. Wood, Ione E. Gibbs (after marriage)
Occupation:Journalist, clubwoman
Years Active:1888–1914

Ione Elveda Wood Gibbs (1871 – June 1923) was an American educator, journalist, and clubwoman. She served as vice-president of the National Association of Colored Women from 1912 to 1914.

Early life

Ione Elveda Wood was born in Burlington, New Jersey, the daughter of George Wood and Emma Simmons Wood.[1] She attended high school in Atlantic City. Her uncle William J. Simmons was the president of Kentucky Normal and Theological Institute, so she attended that school and trained as a teacher, earning her degree in 1888.[2]

Career

Wood was an instructor at the Kentucky Normal and Theological Institute while she was still a teenage student there. She wrote freelance articles, and from 1888 to 1891 was on the editorial staff of Our Women and Children, a Baptist women's magazine run by her uncle. "Miss Ione E. Wood ranks today among the foremost of our women", commented one contemporary writer, "first, from the standpoint of acknowledged intellectual ability to write; second, as an earnest educator and race advocate".[3]

After marriage, Gibbs was active in the Ada Sweet Pioneer Club, a literary and musical club in Minneapolis.[4] In 1905, she served as the first president of the Minnesota State Federation of Afro-American Women's Clubs, after black women's groups were refused membership in the existing Minnesota Federation of Women's Clubs.[5] [6] From 1912 to 1914, she was vice-president of the National Association of Colored Women.[7] [8] She wrote an essay, "Woman's Part in the Uplift of the Negro Race" (1907), which was published nationally, and is still occasionally reprinted.[9]

Personal life

Wood married restaurant owner Jasper Gibbs in 1890. They had five sons: Jasper, Hiram, Morris, Mark, and Wendell. They resided in Minneapolis.[10] [11] Wood died in 1923.[12]

Notes and References

  1. Frank Lincoln Mather, ed., Who's Who of the Colored Race (1915): 114.
  2. Irvine Garland Penn, The Afro-American Press and Its Editors (Willey & Company 1891): 410–413.
  3. Monroe Alphus Majors, Noted Negro Women: Their Triumphs and Activities (Donohue and Henneberry 1893): 237.
  4. Donald Ross, "African American and Jewish Women's Clubs in Minnesota" Reading, Meeting and Reforming: Women's Study Clubs in Minnesota, 1880–1942
  5. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28318031/ione_e_wood_gibbs_1905/ "Form Own Society"
  6. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28317358/ione_e_gibbs_1907/ "State Federation"
  7. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28317162/ione_wood_gibbs_1913/ "Mrs. Ione Gibbs Visits Des Moines"
  8. http://dbs.ohiohistory.org/africanam/html/page4939.html?ID=2338&Current=P166&View=Text "National Association of Colored Women Hampton Meeting"
  9. Ione E. Gibbs, "Woman's Part in the Uplift of the Negro Race" The Colored American Magazine (March 1907): pp. 264–267; in Teresa Zackodnik, ed., Black Feminist Organizing (Routledge July 2007).
  10. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28304476/ione_woods_gibb_1890/ "Minneapolis"
  11. https://hennepinhistorymuseumblog.wordpress.com/2018/01/09/a-fantasy-in-iron/ "A Fantasy in Iron"
  12. "Mrs. Ione E. Gibbs, Prominent Club Woman, Dies in Minneapolis" The Appeal (June 16, 1923): 1.