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The Jane Edna Hunter Museum is at the Phillis Wheatley Center in Cleveland. [4] Jane Edna Hunter: a case study of Black leadership is a book about her life. [5] Jane Edna Hunter was born Jane Harris in 1882. [9] She was a fair complexion woman, because her father was born to a slave and a Caucasian overseer. [9]
Jane Edna Hunter (1882–1971) Cuyahoga: 1978: African-American social worker who established the Working Girls Association in Cleveland, Ohio in 1911, which later became the Phillis Wheatley Association of Cleveland. [11] [12] [13] Consolata Kline (1916–2016) Mahoning: 1978: Executive director of St. Elizabeth Hospital Medical Center [14 ...
Jane Edna Hunter: 1925 (Cleveland Law School) founder of the Phyllis Wheatley Center for the poor in Cleveland, Ohio [17] Frank G. Jackson: Mayor of Cleveland, formerly City Council president [18] Peter Kirsanow: 1979 attorney, writer and a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights: Thomas Demetrios Lambros: 1952 former United States ...
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In Cleveland, Jane Edna Hunter founded a group in 1911 that was later renamed the Phillis Wheatley Association. [34] [35] The El Paso, Texas Phillis Wheatley Club was started in 1915. [28] Charleston, South Carolina started a club in 1916 which was named the Phillis Wheatley Literary and Social Club. [36]
Jane Hunter may refer to: Jane Hunter (scientist), Australian scientist; Jane Edna Hunter (1881–1971), African-American social worker This page was last edited on ...
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Jane Edna Hunter, L.B. 1925, founder of the Phyllis Wheatley Center for the poor in Cleveland, Ohio [13] Jay Ford Laning, U.S. Representative from Ohio [14] James Lawson, civil rights leader and minister, worked alongside Martin Luther King in the Southern Baptist Leadership Conference [13] Charles O. Lobeck, U.S. Representative from Nebraska [15]