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MXO Black History Month Facts: Jane Edna Hunter Founder Phillis Wheatly Association

19 February 2010 Education, Higher Learning, Lifestyle No Comment

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Posted February 19th 2010

Jane Edna Hunter (1882- 1971)The daughter of a sharecropper, she was born Jane Edna Harris at Woodburn Farm near Pendleton, SC.  She acquired her last name by a brief marriage. Hunter graduated in 1905 as a trained nurse from Hampton Institute, VA, and came to Cleveland, serving in various nursing jobs. She attended Marshall Law School (later Cleveland Marshall Law School of CLEVELAND STATE UNIVERSITY) and passed the Ohio bar examination.

When she arrived in Cleveland in 1905 she could not find decent housing or professional work because of segregation laws and practices. Having no friends or relatives, her first residence turn out to be a place where prostitutes stayed (Shaw, 1995). With the help of other women, she formed the Working Girl’s Home Association, which eventually became known as the Phyllis Wheatley Association. The purpose of this voluntary association was to build a safe residence for the homeless, unprotected and working women and girls of the race. The first home was a 23 room facility that opened in 1913 with the second and more expanded facility opening in 1917. The following passage from the official organ of the National Association of Colored Women, The Woman’s National Magazine (1937) describe the growth and development of the Phyllis Wheatley Association in Cleveland, Ohio.

The Association…was established in a frame house at 2265 East 40th street, where twenty-two girls were the benefactors of a ‘dream come true.’ The demands upon the new home were amazing and its services had to be increased from housing girls and women to providing a cafeteria for them, finding work for newcomers, providing recreational activities for their leisure time and starting clubs and classes, such as those in home economics. The community began to look to the association for inspiration, help and guidance. The work grew in leaps and bounds, until it was necessary to obtain larger quarters, known as the Winona Apartments, an eighty room building, located at East 40th street and Central Avenue.

The association was modeled by 9 similar institutions throughout the United States. Hunter served as the association’s executive secretary until 1948. Following retirement, she founded the Phillis Wheatley Foundation, a scholarship fund for African American high school graduates. The foundation later established the Jane Edna Hunter Scholarship Fund in her honor. Hunter held honorary degrees from Fisk University, Allen University in Columbia, SC, and Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio. She founded the Women’s Civic League of Cleveland (1943), belonged to the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE (NAACP).


In 1930, Hunter became Director of the Phyllis Wheatley Department of the National Association of Colored Women (NACW). The purpose of the Department was to build a national network of Phyllis Wheatley Associations that will not only house self-supporting, self-respecting African American women and girls, but provide a meeting place for clubwomen. These facilities were to be a “lighthouse of service” in their communities. (The Woman’s National Magazine, 1937). They epitomized the self-help and social debt response to those less fortunate.

Jane Edna (Harris) Hunter’s  health failed in the mid 1950s. She lived in a nursing home from the early 1960s until her death on January 13, 1971 in Cleveland.

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