Julia Britton Hooks

Julia Britton Hooks
Born Julia Ann Amanda Moorehead Britton
(1852-05-04)May 4, 1852
Frankfort, Kentucky, United States
Died March 10, 1942(1942-03-10) (aged 89)[1]
Memphis, Tennessee
Resting place Zion Christian Cemetery
Memphis, Tennessee[1]
Occupation musician, educator, social worker, civil rights activist
Spouse(s) Sam Wertles; Charles F. Hooks
Children Robert B., Henry
Parent(s) Laura Marshall and Henry Harrison Britton

Julia Britton Hooks (May 4, 1852 March 10, 1942) was a musician and educator whose work with youth, the elderly and indigent was highly respected in her family's home state of Kentucky and in Memphis, Tennessee, where she lived with her second husband, Charles F. Hooks. She was a charter member of the Memphis branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and her example served as an inspiration for her grandson, Benjamin Hooks, executive director of the NAACP from 1977 to 1992. Julia was also a leader for African-American women and active in the civil rights movement.

Background and early life

Julia Ann Amanda Moorehead Britton was born in Frankfort, Kentucky, on May 4, 1852. Her mother Laura Marshall was a gifted singer and musician, and well-educated even though she grew up as a slave in the household of a relation to her father, the Kentucky statesman Thomas F. Marshall. Laura, nearly white, was emancipated at the age of sixteen. Julia's father, Henry Harrison Britton, was a carpenter and free born. So, Julia was born in a slave state as a free person. She was raised in Lexington where she became well known as a musical prodigy at an early age, playing in parlor concerts for wealthy white families.[2] In 1859 with her younger sister Mary E. Britton (who later became the first African-American, female physician in Kentucky), she attended a branch school in Lexington started by Mr. William H. Gibson of Louisville, Kentucky.[3]

At the age of eighteen, Hooks attended Berea College where she was one of the very first African-American women to attend college in the state of Kentucky. Not only did she attend college as a student, but also became the first African-American on the faculty at Berea College. She was active in musical groups such as the Liszt Mullard club which performed classical music in the community during the 1880s. She taught music at the school from 1870-1872 (the first African-American to teach white students at Berea College), and graduated in the class of 1874.[4]

Education and civil rights activism

After graduating from college she moved to Greenville, Mississippi, to work as a teacher. There she met and married Sam Wertles. She worked to get Blanche K. Bruce elected to the Senate. After her husband died in a yellow fever epidemic, she moved in 1876 to Memphis, Tennessee.[5] She lived in musicians' paradise, Beale Street, and became known for her local social service work. By 1881 she began teaching again in public schools.

Julia married her second husband, Charles F. Hooks, in Memphis. But an argument between her husband and her 23-year-old sister, Hattie, led to Hattie's suicide in June 1891. The newspapers reported that Charles had accused her of "immorality" and she shot herself "instead of going to church."[6]

Julia's grandson, Benjamin Hooks remembered her from his youth as "born to rebel," and he recalled during the [4] that there were several instances when she was arrested for disobeying Jim Crow laws. While attending a performance at a Memphis theatre, she was told to sit in the "colored balcony" instead of where she had sat in the main section for many other performances. She refused to leave and eventually had to be carried out of the theatre by two policemen. Julia was arrested for disorderly conduct and fined five dollars. Julia battled segregation in public schools, inequality of facilities and the discriminatory treatment of African American children.

Hooks not only acted for African American civil rights but put her hard work and compassion to good use in other areas. She and her husband, a truant officer, were given supervision of a juvenile detention center in Memphis in 1907. She treated these children with compassion and continued to do so even after her husband was killed in 1913 by one of the detainees.[2] She was admired by the community for her hard work and compassion for others, and her work as an officer of the juvenile court then later as a consultant of the juvenile court judge. She organized the fundraising for the Old Folks and Orphans Home, opened a private kindergarten and elementary school in her own home for African-American children, and founded the Hooks School of Music.[7]

In 1909 she became involved in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). She participated in the suffrage movement, helping women gain the right to vote, and served as president of the Lexington Women's Improvement Club in Kentucky.

Hooks was admired by friends and family and even had family members follow in her footsteps. Ida B. Wells also came to the attention of Julia, as an activist and a musician, even though Hooks was senior to Wells by ten years the two worked together with the same drive and passion for equality.[8]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Julia Britton Hooks at Find a Grave
  2. 1 2 "Julia Ann Amanda Moorehead Britton Hooks," at the Wayback Machine (archived November 20, 2009) in James T. Haley's Afro-American Encyclopedia (1895) reproduced at Memphis History. Accessed 29 Nov. 2010.
  3. See p. 69 in William H. Gibson (1897). History of the United brothers of friendship and Sisters of the mysterious ten: in two parts ; a Negro order ; organized August 1, 1861, in the city of Louisville, Ky. Printed by the Bradley & Gilbert company.
  4. 1 2 Quarandillo, Ann Mary. "Founders' Day Honors 'Angel of Beale Street'" at the Wayback Machine (archived May 17, 2006), Berea College Magazine, Winter 2002. Retrieved: 14 February 2013.
  5. Selma Lewis, "Julia Britton Hooks," The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2009. Accessed 29 Nov. 2010.
  6. "Accused of Immorality A Young Woman Shoots Herself Instead of Going to Church," Topeka Plaindealer (June 12, 1891), p. 1.
  7. "Julia Hooks, An Activist and Educator with Passion!" African American Registry. Accessed 29 November 2010.
  8. Davidson, James West (2007). "They Say:" Ida B. Wells and The Reconstruction of Race. London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516020-8.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, February 11, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.