Ruth Standish Baldwin Explained

Ruth Standish Baldwin
Birth Date:December 5, 1865
Birth Place:Ludlow, Massachusetts, United States
Death Place:New York City, United States
Known For:Co-founder, National Urban League
Spouse:William Henry Baldwin Jr.
Parents:Samuel Bowles III
Relatives:Chester B. Bowles (nephew); John Fulton Folinsbee (son-in-law); Samuel Bowles (grand-nephew)

Ruth Standish Bowles Baldwin (December 5, 1865 – December 14, 1934) was an American suffragist and a co-founder of the National Urban League.

Early life and education

Ruth Standish Bowles was born in Ludlow, Massachusetts, the daughter of journalist and abolitionist Samuel Bowles III and Mary Sanford Dwight Schermerhorn Bowles. Her parents were friends with poet Emily Dickinson and her family.[1] [2] She graduated from Smith College in 1887.[3] [4]

Career

In 1905, Baldwin joined with Frances Kellor, a social worker and attorney, to form the National League for the Protection of Colored Women in order to protect women migrating to the north who might be "easy targets for con men who could lead them into prostitution". The NLPCW organized to steer women into safe employment instead.[5] She founded the Committee on Urban Conditions Among Negros with George Edmund Haynes in 1910.[6] [7] She wrote of the principles behind her work:

Let us work together, not as colored people, nor as white people, for the narrow benefit of any group alone, but together, as American citizens for the common good of our common city, our common country.[8]
From this work, Baldwin became a co-founder of the National Urban League, and chair of the league's board from 1913 to 1915.[9] She helped found Highlander Folk School at the end of her life.[10] She corresponded with Booker T. Washington.[11]

Baldwin was the first woman elected to a permanent position on the board of trustees at Smith College, serving on the board from 1906 to 1926. "The business of the College, transacted in the presence of a mind so clear and sympathies so ardent, undergoes a change," wrote a colleague at Smith. "To express at all what Mrs. Baldwin is and what she has given Smith College would require more space and more art than the present writer has at her command."[12]

Personal life and legacy

Bowles married railroad tycoon William Henry Baldwin Jr. in 1889.[13] They had two children, also named Ruth[14] and William.[15] [16] [17] Her daughter married artist John Fulton Folinsbee.[18] Her husband died in 1905,[19] and she died in 1934, at the age of 69, in New York. The economist Samuel Bowles is her grand-nephew, son her her nephew Chester B. Bowles, who was notable as a governor of Connecticut and an ambassador. Ruth Standish Baldwin and George Haynes are honored as founders of the National Urban League with a plaque on the Extra Mile Path in Washington, D.C.[20]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dakin . M. R. . Samuel Bowles . 2023-03-08 . Bowles-Hoar Family Papers, Amherst College.
  2. Web site: Dakin . M. R. . Mary Bowles . 2023-03-08 . Bowles-Hoar Family Papers, Amherst College.
  3. Web site: The Smith Alumnae Quarterly. 1 May 2018. Google Books.
  4. Book: Parris . Guichard . Blacks in the City: A History of the National Urban League . Brooks . Lester . 1971 . Little, Brown . 21 . en.
  5. Book: Moore, Jacqueline M. . Booker T. Washington, W.E.B. Du Bois, and the Struggle for Racial Uplift . 2003 . Rowman & Littlefield . 978-0-8420-2994-0 . en.
  6. Web site: Michigan History. 1 May 1976. Michigan Department of State. Google Books.
  7. National Urban League, "National Urban League Celebrates Harlem, 'The Beating Heart Of Black Culture In America'" (March 7, 2023).
  8. News: 1934-12-22 . Founder of Nat'l Urban League Dies . 3 . The Pittsburgh Courier . 2023-03-08 . Newspapers.com.
  9. News: Price . Hugh . 1997-03-27 . African-Americans shouldn't forget women's contributions to history . 6 . The Times . 2023-03-08 . Newspapers.com.
  10. Book: Cutlip, Scott M. . The Unseen Power: Public Relations: A History . 5 November 2013 . Routledge . 9781136690006 . 310 . Google Books.
  11. Book: Booker T. Washington Papers Volume 13: 1914-15. Assistant Editors, Susan Valenza and Sadie M. Harlan. Booker T.. Washington. Louis R.. Harlan. 1 November 1984. University of Illinois Press. Google Books. 9780252011252.
  12. [iarchive:smithalumn2526alum/page/n478/mode/1up|"The Retirement of Mrs. Baldwin"]
  13. Web site: The Harvard Graduates' Magazine. 1 May 2018. Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association. Google Books.
  14. News: 1911-01-07 . Miss Ruth Standish Baldwin's Debut . 21 . Brooklyn Life . 2023-03-08 . Newspapers.com.
  15. Web site: Harvard College Class of 1885 Secretary's Report. 1 May 2018. Rockwell and Churchill Press. Google Books.
  16. News: 1916-06-10 . Miss Cecilia Brewster Engaged to Mr. William H. Baldwin 3d . 12 . Brooklyn Life . 2023-03-08 . Newspapers.com.
  17. News: Goodman . George Jr. . 1980-05-20 . W.H. Baldwin Dead; Public Relations Aide, Urban League Leader; Arbitration Society Official Urban League President . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-03-08 . 0362-4331.
  18. News: 1914-09-12 . Miss Ruth Baldwin's Wedding . 11 . Brooklyn Life . 2023-03-08 . Newspapers.com.
  19. Web site: 1 May 2018 . The Massachusetts Magazine: Devoted to Massachusetts History, Genealogy, Biography . Salem Press Company . Google Books.
  20. Web site: Dulman . Yael . 2022-10-10 . The Noble Women Honored at the Extra Mile Path in Washington, DC . 2023-03-08 . WWP.