Knowledge (XXG)

Rebecca Stiles Taylor

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159:, and one of very few women journalists for that newspaper, and her writing contributions led her to be nationally recognized. She often wrote on controversial topics such as racial segregation. In those columns about racial interactions and political affairs, she often referenced other accomplished writers like Mrs. Corbett Ashby. Taylor also wrote a weekly column, "Activities of Women's National Organizations", during the war time in order to kept the readers up to date about women's organizations across the country. In addition to race relations, Taylor also spoke our for women's issues by writing in support of sound and equal marriages and the elevation of the negro woman. Beyond her writings, Taylor is lauded for her efforts to make positive social change, including education, civil rights, and public health. 193:
spurring that on in a vast range of outlets from high school education to club organization. Taylor was an integrationist and advocated an alliance between black women's organizations with other national women's organizations in order eliminate social tension and create a sustainable future. Drawing from her efforts, the Stiles Taylor family remains a prominent figure of charitable works to this day with many of her descendants serving as pastors, teachers, and charity group leaders in the Savannah community. To commemorate a lifetime of service and activism, Taylor was inducted into the
31: 130:. She started her journalistic work as a columnist for a local Savannah newspaper, where she was not afraid to speak out against the tense racial issues of the era. After many years of segregated schooling, the education she received at Atlanta University, a less racially biased institution of the time, was instrumental in her career and set her on the course for social activism. A cousin of Stiles Taylor described the influence the university had on her: 192:
Taylor inspired many with her willingness to take action towards furthering her social causes during a time when it was somewhat taboo to do so. She had a radical vision of social improvement for her time, saying that the South was "on the threshold of a new era," and she dedicated her life towards
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in reaction to a lynching. She cared deeply about reconciling racial divides and took her concerns to people of highest authority in an effort to make a change. Taylor's lifelong career of dedication to the social, mental, and physical betterment of all people has led her into national recognition.
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to organize the entire Southeastern Region of the club in 1919, assuming the position of corresponding secretary and president of the Association's Georgia State Federation. Taylor was passionate and active about the wellbeing of people in her community, and the nation as a whole. Earlier in her
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They picked up the mission to educate everyone of color. They gave them a mission, almost like a preacher in the pulpit or a missionary on his ship going to a foreign shore. They were to go back. They were to cleanse, protect, and educate the lesser of all the children in their cities and
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career, Taylor devoted much time to educating people in Savannah with limited opportunities. She achieved great success in these efforts. She was also the first African-American woman to become Savannah's Probation Officer in
481: 166:. Additionally, Taylor served as national leader of the National Association of Colored Women Mary McLeod Bethune's "chief aide." Furthermore, she led the Savannah Chapter of the 167: 106:. She was best known for her contributions to the community as the founder of several charitable outlets in the area and as an activist for women's and civil rights. 1579: 1584: 1549: 474: 1564: 1544: 220: 1554: 467: 402: 1559: 1574: 418:
Cooper, Caryl (2014). "Selling Negro Women to Negro Women and to the World Rebecca Stiles Taylor and the Chicago Defender, 1939–1945".
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From writer to teacher to social activist, Taylor was a very ambitious and accomplished person. She was a well-known columnist for the
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Double Victory: How African American Women Broke Race and Gender Barriers to Help Win World War II
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Taylor received a considerable education, graduating from the
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TO IMPROVE THE RACE: EUGENICS AS A STRATEGY FOR RACIAL UPLIFT
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In 1917, she founded the Toussaint L'Ouverture Branch of the
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Chicago: Chicago Review Press. 1565:Clark Atlanta University alumni 1545:American civil rights activists 395:Slavery and Freedom in Savannah 432:10.1080/00947679.2014.12062921 1: 1229:Nell Kendall Hodgson Woodruff 279:Carney Smith, Jessie (1992). 1555:African-American journalists 1382:Jean Elizabeth Geiger Wright 1198:Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas 491:Georgia Women of Achievement 349:(thesis). Vanderbilt Library 283:Notable Black American Women 195:Georgia Women of Achievement 716:Lettie Pate Whitehead Evans 368:Elmore, Charles J. (2002). 308:Mullenbach, Cheryl (2013). 1601: 1575:Columbia University alumni 1125:May duBignon Stiles Howard 649:Susan Cobb Milton Atkinson 607:Emily Harvie Thomas Tubman 393:Harris, Leslie M. (2014). 287:. Detroit: Gale Research. 1570:Hampton University alumni 1355: 1344: 1077: 1066: 779: 768: 508: 497: 28: 1560:Women's page journalists 1434:Josephine Fields Sanders 1307:Mamie George S. Williams 1271:Carolyn Mackenzie Carter 848:Alice Harrell Strickland 822:Catherine Evans Whitener 561:Cassandra Pickett Durham 297:– via zsr.wfu.edu. 1506:Elizabeth "Bessie" Tift 1372:Katharine DuPre Lumpkin 1302:Susie Baker King Taylor 1224:Frances Freeborn Pauley 1120:Mary Francis Hill Coley 1040:Caroline Pafford Miller 1014:Elfrida De Renne Barrow 915:Emily Barnelia Woodward 905:Helen Dortch Longstreet 864:Madeleine Kiker Anthony 838:Wessie Gertrude Connell 382:– via google.com. 1470:Luck Flanders Gambrell 1460:Phyllis Jenkins Barrow 1429:Lizzie Lurline Collier 1203:Bazoline Estelle Usher 1177:Henrietta Stanley Dull 1019:Amilee Chastain Graves 967:Sarah Porter Hillhouse 869:Helena Maud Brown Cobb 685:Rebecca Latimer Felton 146: 122:, and later attending 1367:Clarice Cross Bagwell 1193:Rebecca Stiles Taylor 1141:Sarah Randolph Bailey 998:Sara Branham Matthews 957:Eliza Frances Andrews 910:Sarah McLendon Murphy 900:Louise Frederick Hays 551:Dicksie Bradley Bandy 100:Rebecca Stiles Taylor 23:Rebecca Stiles Taylor 1491:Beatrice Hirsch Haas 1475:Dorothy Rogers Tilly 1255:Katie Hall Underwood 1250:Ellamae Ellis League 1146:Beulah Rucker Oliver 1115:Lillian Gordy Carter 1024:Susan Dowdell Myrick 993:Helen Douglas Mankin 962:Grace Towns Hamilton 843:Lula Dobbs McEachern 721:Julia Collier Harris 700:Lucy Barrow McIntire 628:Anna Colquitt Hunter 1408:Laura Pope Forester 1328:Mary Dorothy Lyndon 1172:Mary Gregory Jewett 988:Edith Lenora Foster 931:Alice Woodby McKane 874:Julia Lester Dillon 796:Laura Askew Haygood 731:Carrie Steele Logan 690:Mary Ann Harris Gay 654:Nellie Peters Black 623:Selena Sloan Butler 602:Ruth Hartley Mosley 530:Juliette Gordon Low 227:. December 25, 2013 225:savannahtribune.com 172:Mary McLeod Bethune 128:Columbia University 1413:Allie Murray Smith 1297:Ludie Clay Andrews 1276:Clermont Huger Lee 1245:Sarah Harper Heard 1219:Allie Carroll Hart 1167:Lollie Belle Wylie 936:Nina Anderson Pape 879:Leila Ross Wilburn 801:Ellen Axson Wilson 791:Sallie Ellis Davis 669:Lugenia Burns Hope 420:Journalism History 260:. December 8, 2015 164:American Red Cross 120:Atlanta University 70:Atlanta University 1522: 1521: 1518: 1517: 1514: 1513: 1496:Adella Hunt Logan 1444:Josephine Wilkins 1340: 1339: 1336: 1335: 1089:Mary Ann Lipscomb 1062: 1061: 1058: 1057: 983:Margaret O. Bynum 764: 763: 760: 759: 633:Hazel Jane Raines 597:Margaret Mitchell 566:Viola Ross Napier 535:Flannery O'Connor 404:978-0-8203-4410-2 370:Savannah, Georgia 124:Hampton Institute 104:Savannah, Georgia 97: 96: 48:Savannah, Georgia 1592: 1398:Ruby M. Anderson 1357: 1346: 1094:Celestine Sibley 1079: 1068: 941:Jeannette Rankin 895:Mathilda Beasley 817:Julia L. 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Index

A Black woman with short hair, wearing a dark beaded top with a scooped neckline
Savannah, Georgia
Atlanta University
Beach Institute
Journalist
teacher
social worker
Savannah, Georgia
Beach Institute
Atlanta University
Hampton Institute
Columbia University
Chicago Defender
American Red Cross
National Association of Colored Women's Club
Mary McLeod Bethune
Juvenile Court
Woodrow Wilson
Georgia Women of Achievement




"Rebecca Stiles Taylor To Be Inducted Into Georgia Women of Achievement 2014"




"Forgotten Women Part 7: Rebecca Stiles Taylor"
Notable Black American Women

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