Sarah Ella Wilson

Sarah Ellen Wilson, from a 1916 publication.

Sarah Ella Wilson (April 7, 1874 – November 1, 1955) was an American educator and clubwoman based in Massachusetts.

Early life

Sarah Ella Wilson was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, the daughter of George M. and Elizabeth Allen Wilson.[1] She was named for her parents' friend and teacher, abolitionist Sarah Chase; Chase mentored the younger Sarah, took her on trips, and taught her to play piano. Sarah Ella Wilson was educated at Classical High School in Worcester, and at Worcester Normal School, finishing in 1894.[2]

Career

Sarah Ella Wilson was one of the first two black schoolteachers in Worcester. She taught first grade classes at Belmont Street Elementary School for almost fifty years, from 1895 to her retirement in 1944.[3] Local lore holds that she missed just one day of teaching in all that time.[4]

Wilson was an active clubwoman. She was a member of the Worcester Women's Progressive Club, and vice-president of the Home for Aged Colored People. She was active in the local Negro Women's Club, and the Worcester Inter-Racial Council, and the local NAACP chapter. She was treasurer of the Northeastern Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, a body of the National Association of Colored Women, for twenty-five years, and chaired the NACW scholarship committee. She was also active in her church.[1]

Personal life and legacy

Sarah Ella Wilson died in 1955, aged 81 years. Her portrait hangs in the library at Belmont Street School. There is a scholarship named for her at Worcester State College.[4]

Poet Corrine Bostic wrote a biography of Sarah Ella Wilson, Go Onward and Upward (1974).[5]

References

  1. 1 2 John Russell Hawkins, Centennial Encyclopedia of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Volume 1 (AME Church 1916): 252-253.
  2. Janette Thomas Greenwood, First Fruits of Freedom: The Migration of Former Slaves and Their Search for Equality in Worcester, Massachusetts, 1862-1900 (University of North Carolina Press 2010): 113-115. ISBN 9780807895788
  3. "Worcester's First African-American School Teachers: Jennie Cora Clough and Sarah Ella Wilson" InCity Times (June 15, 2009).
  4. 1 2 Sarah Ella Wilson portrait, Belmont Street School, at Window on Your Past.
  5. Corrine Bostic Memorial Fellowship, Worcester State University.
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