Maggie Lena Walker (1864–1934) - Encyclopedia Virginia
ENTRY

Maggie Lena Walker (1864–1934)

SUMMARY

Maggie Lena Walker was an African American entrepreneur and civic leader who broke traditional gender and discriminatory laws by becoming the first Black woman to establish and become president of a bank in the United States—the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank in Richmond. As of 2010, when it was known as Consolidated Bank and Trust Company, it was the oldest continually African American–operated bank in the United States. In her role as grand secretary of the Independent Order of Saint Luke, Walker also was indispensable in organizing a variety of enterprises that advanced the African American community while expanding the public role of women. Although as an African American woman in the post–Civil War South she faced social, economic, and political barriers in her life and business ventures, Walker, by encouraging investment and collective action, achieved tangible improvements for African Americans.

READING LEVEL
Grade 4

Summary

Maggie Lena Walker was an important African American leader. She broke unfair laws and became the first Black woman to start a bank in the nation. She was also the first Black woman to be the president of a bank. Walker’s bank was called the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank in Richmond. It was the oldest bank led by an African American in the United States. Walker became the leader of the Independent Order of Saint Luke. She organized projects that helped the African American community. Her leadership set an example for many other women. As an African American woman living in the South, she faced many obstacles in her life. However, Walker encouraged investment and collective action. She helped bring important changes for African Americans.

In This Entry

Contributor: Muriel Miller Branch

Early Years and Family

Maggie Lena Mitchell was born on July 15, 1864 in Richmond, Virginia. Her mother, Elizabeth Draper, was a former slave. Her mother worked as a cook for Elizabeth Van Lew, an abolitionist and Union spy for the during the Civil War. Soon after Walker was born, her mother married a man named William Mitchell. The couple had a child, Maggie’s half-brother, Johnnie, in 1870.

Her stepfather left the Van Lew home and became the headwaiter at a respected hotel. The family was able to rent a small house. In February 1876, William Mitchell died. His death drove the family into poverty. As a way for the family to provide for themselves, Maggie’s mother began a small laundry business. Maggie helped by bringing clean laundry to white customers. This allowed her to see the unfairness between the races.

In her later years, Walker said, “I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth, but with a laundry basket practically on my head.”

Walker went to a public school for African Americans in Richmond. She then went to Richmond Colored Normal School, where she was trained as a teacher. After graduating in 1883, she became a teacher and taught for three years. In 1886, she married Armstead Walker Jr., who worked in his family’s business. However, Maggie’s job had a rule that banned married women from being employed. She was forced to quit her teaching job. The couple had three sons. Russell Eccles Talmadge Walker was born in 1890. Armstead Mitchell Walker was born in 1893 but died seven months later. Their youngest son, Melvin DeWitt Walker, was born in 1897. The Walkers had one adopted daughter, Polly Anderson.

In 1904 the Walkers bought a home in Richmond’s Jackson Ward neighborhood. This neighborhood was called the “Harlem of the South.” The Walkers opened their home to many family members including their children and grandchildren. Over time, the home expanded from nine to twenty-eight rooms to make space for the rapidly growing family.

The Independent Order of Saint Luke

In 1881, Walker joined the Independent Order of Saint Luke, a group that helped Black Americans come together. Over time, Walker became an important leader in the order. In 1895, she started the Juvenile Branch of the Independent Order of Saint Luke.

The Juvenile Branch helped young African Americans build pride and confidence. The branch stressed the importance of education and community service.

The Independent Order was about to go bankrupt. Just before the order ran out of money, Walker was elected as Grand Secretary. By that time, Walker had served in many different roles in the order. She had many experiences to bring to her new leadership role. She spent the rest of her life helping the organization to grow. Under Walker’s leadership, the order’s money problems were turned around.

On August 20, 1901, she gave a speech about her vision for the order. She wanted to expand the organization even more. Her vision included building a bank and starting a newspaper
. She also had an idea for a store to offer job opportunities to African Americans. The store would carry goods that Black consumers wanted at more affordable prices. Bringing together communication, money, and business would help the Black community become more independent and successful. In five years, Walker brought her vision to life. The St. Luke Herald newspaper began in 1902.

The Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank opened for business in November 1903. Walker’s department store, Saint Luke Emporium, was up and running by April 1905.

Walker said: “Let us put our moneys together… Let us have a bank that will take the nickels and turn them into dollars.” She wanted young members to start early by opening bank accounts. Her hope was that they would be more independent and not have to rely on white employers. The bank was successful and helped Richmond’s Black community. It even led to more Black families being able to buy homes. During the Great Depression, while other banks failed, Walker kept the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank alive. The bank continues to exist and was the oldest bank in the United States run by African Americans.

Challenges and Politics

The white community and Virginia’s government challenged her vision. Virginia made a rule that the order and the St. Luke bank had to be separated. The Saint Luke Emporium struggled from its beginnings. White storeowners opposed the emporium. Some Black consumers continued to shop at white stores. Some may have been afraid of what might happen if they did not keep shopping at the white stores. As a result, the emporium could not make money and was forced to close in 1911.

Walker also faced misfortune and tragedy. In 1915, Maggie’s husband was killed in an accident. Years later, her son, Russell Walker died in 1923. Walker developed diabetes and,

because of her poor health and a leg wound that never healed, spent the last ten years of her life in a wheelchair.

Walker’s reputation as a powerful speaker and business leader continued to grow. She became an activist against discrimination and segregation. She cofounded the Richmond Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Council of Colored Women. She also helped organize a boycott against segregated seating on streetcars in Richmond. Walker hoped to become the leader of public education in Virginia. She ran for this position with John Mitchell Jr., who was running for Governor. However, all of the Black Republicans lost. Discouraged by politics, she continued to work for change in her community. She also was a strong supporter of the antilynching movement.

Legacy

Maggie Lena Walker died on December 15, 1934. Her funeral was held at Richmond’s First African Baptist Church. Her home was bought by the National Park Service in 1979. It is now a National Historic Site. The Maggie L. Walker Governor’s School for Government and International Studies, a college prep school, was founded in 1991.

Grade 8

Summary

Maggie Lena Walker was an African American entrepreneur and civic leader. She broke traditional discriminatory laws by becoming the first Black woman to establish and become president of a bank in the United States—the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank in Richmond. As of 2010, when it was known as Consolidated Bank and Trust Company, it was the oldest African American–operated bank in the United States. As grand secretary of the Independent Order of Saint Luke, Walker also was vital in organizing enterprises that advanced the African American community while expanding the public role of women. An African American woman in the post–Civil War South, she faced social, economic, and political barriers in her life and business ventures. However, Walker encouraged investment and collective action and achieved important improvements for African Americans.

In This Entry

Contributor:  Muriel Miller Branch

Early Years and Family

Maggie Lena Mitchell was born on July 15, 1864 on the Van Lew estate in Richmond. Mitchell’s mother, Elizabeth Draper, was a formerly enslaved woman who worked as an assistant cook for Elizabeth Van Lew, an abolitionist, Unionist, and spy for the Union during the American Civil War (1861–1865). In the Van Lew house Draper met Eccles Cuthbert, an Irish American who reported from Virginia for the New York Herald. Although Cuthbert was Walker’s biological father, there is no record that suggests Cuthbert and Draper married. Soon after Walker was born Draper married William Mitchell, who worked for the Van Lew household as a butler. The couple had a child, Walker’s half-brother, Johnnie Mitchell, in 1870.

William Mitchell left the Van Lew household and became the headwaiter at the prestigious Saint Charles Hotel. The family was able to set out and rent a small house in College Alley near the Medical College of Virginia. In February 1876, William Mitchell’s body was found drowned in the James River. While authorities claimed the death was a suicide, Walker’s mother insisted that he had been murdered. William Mitchell’s death plunged his widow and her two children into poverty. As a way for the family to provide for themselves, Elizabeth Mitchell began a small laundry business. Walker assisted by returning clean laundry to white patrons. This allowed her to observe the economic and social differences between the races. Her childhood left such an impression on Walker that years later, in 1904, she recalled, “I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth, but with a laundry basket practically on my head.”

Walker attended newly built public schools for African Americans in Richmond. She went on to attend Richmond Colored Normal School, where she was trained as a teacher. After graduating in 1883, she taught for three years at the Valley School. In 1886, she married Armstead Walker Jr., who worked in his family’s construction and bricklaying business. However, due to a policy that banned the employment of married women, she was forced to quit her teaching position. The couple had three sons—Russell Eccles Talmadge Walker was born in 1890; Armstead Mitchell Walker was born in 1893, but died seven months later; and their youngest son, Melvin DeWitt Walker, was born in 1897. The Walkers had one adopted daughter, Polly Anderson.

In 1904 the Walkers purchased their family home at in Richmond’s Jackson Ward neighborhood, which was dubbed the “Harlem of the South.” The Walkers opened their home to numerous family members including their children and grandchildren. Over time, the home expanded from nine to twenty-eight rooms to accommodate the rapidly growing family.

The Independent Order of Saint Luke

In 1881, Walker had joined the Independent Order of Saint Luke, an African American fraternal society. Walker rose through the Independent Order’s ranks and used her positions to influence young people. In 1895, as grand deputy matron, she started the Juvenile Branch of the Independent Order of Saint Luke.

The Juvenile Branch was meant to build a sense of community and confidence in young African Americans. The branch stressed the importance of education and community service. To emphasize her belief that the future success of the order came from investing in youth, Walker adopted the motto: “As the twig is bent, the tree is inclined.”

Just before the Independent Order went bankrupt, Walker was elected as Grand Secretary. Walker spent sixteen years in different positions and brought a diversity of perspectives to her new role. She devoted the rest of her life to building membership and resources, expanding activities in business and social service, and keeping the financial operations efficient.

Under Walker’s guidance, the order’s fortunes were completely reversed. Over her twenty-five years of leadership, it collected nearly $3.5 million, claimed 100,000 members, and built up almost $100,000 in reserve.

On August 20, 1901, she gave a now-famous speech before the Independent Order’s council. She declared her vision to take the organization to greater heights. Her vision included a bank founded and operated by the order’s members and a newspaper to share the good news of the order. She also envisioned a department store run by Black employees with goods Black consumers wanted at more affordable prices. Through this merging of communication, money, and industry, the African American community could become financially independent, mobilized, and self-sustaining. Within five years, Walker brought her vision to life. The St. Luke Herald began operation in 1902, the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank opened for business in November 1903, and the Saint Luke Emporium was in operation by April 1905.

Walker declared: “Let us put our moneys together… Let us have a bank that will take the nickels and turn them into dollars.” She encouraged young members to start early by opening bank accounts so that their money would grow as they grew. Her hope was that they would be able to achieve economic independence from white employers. The bank’s success was one ingredient that ensured the stability of Richmond’s Black middle class. It also helped increase Black home ownership in the city. During the Great Depression, while other banks failed, Walker kept the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank alive. She did this by merging it with two other banks to create the Consolidated Bank and Trust Company in 1930. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the bank continued to exist and was the oldest bank in the United States that has been continuously run by African Americans.

Challenges and Politics

Walker’s successes were extraordinary, particularly given the social and political environment of that time. But the white community and Virginia’s state government certainly challenged her vision. After the failure of the United Order of True Reformers’ bank in 1910, Virginia directed fraternal societies and financial institutions to be separate. The St. Luke bank became officially separate from the order. The Saint Luke Emporium struggled from its beginnings. White retailers organized to oppose the emporium and some Black consumers continued to shop at white retailers (perhaps fearing consequences if they did not). As a result, the emporium could not make money and was forced to close its doors in 1911.

Walker also faced misfortune and tragedy. In June 1915 Russell Walker shot and killed his father after mistaking him for an intruder. After five months awaiting trial, he was declared innocent. Russell Walker never recovered from the accident. After eight years battling depression and alcoholism, he died on November 23, 1923. Walker developed diabetes and, because of her failing health and a leg wound that never healed, spent the last decade of her life in a wheelchair.

Walker’s reputation as a powerful speaker and entrepreneur continued to grow. She took on major civic issues and became an activist against discrimination and segregation.

She cofounded the Richmond Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Council of Colored Women. She helped organize the 1904 boycott that protested segregated seating on Richmond streetcars. The boycott was so successful that the company went out of business within the year. In 1921 Walker ran on the “Lily Black” Republican ticket with John Mitchell Jr., editor and publisher of the Richmond Planet. With Mitchell running for governor, Walker hoped to be superintendent of public instruction; however, all of the Black Republicans lost. Disillusioned by politics, she continued to work for change within her community. She was a major contributor to the Industrial Home for Wayward Girls. She also was an ardent supporter of the antilynching movement.

Legacy

Maggie Lena Walker died on December 15, 1934, of gangrene caused by diabetes. Her funeral was held at Richmond’s First African Baptist Church (where she had been a longtime member). Her home at East Leigh Street was purchased by the National Park Service in 1979 and converted into a National Historic Site. The Maggie L. Walker Governor’s School for Government and International Studies, a college preparatory school partially funded by the state, was established in 1991.

Grades 11+

Early Years and Family

Van Lew House

Walker was born Maggie Lena Mitchell on July 15, 1864, on the Van Lew estate in Richmond, as established by the public historian Elvatrice Belsches. Mitchell’s mother, Elizabeth Draper, was a former enslaved woman who worked as an assistant cook for Elizabeth Van Lew, an abolitionist, Unionist, and spy for the Union during the American Civil War (1861–1865). It was in the Van Lew house that Draper met Eccles Cuthbert, an Irish American who reported from Virginia for the New York Herald. Although Cuthbert was Walker’s biological father, there is no record that Cuthbert and Draper married. What is known is that soon after Walker was born Draper married William Mitchell, who worked for the Van Lew household as a butler. The couple had a child, Walker’s half-brother, Johnnie Mitchell, in 1870.

When William Mitchell left the Van Lew household and became the head waiter at the prestigious Saint Charles Hotel, the family was able to rent a small house of their own in College Alley near the Medical College of Virginia. In February 1876, William Mitchell’s body was found drowned in the James River. While authorities claimed the death was a suicide, Walker’s mother insisted that he had been murdered. William Mitchell’s death plunged his widow and her two children into poverty. As a way for the family members to provide for themselves, Elizabeth Mitchell began a small laundry business. Walker assisted by returning clean laundry to white patrons, a position that allowed her to observe the economic and social disparity between the races. This part of her childhood left such an impression on Walker that years later, in 1904, she recalled, “I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth, but with a laundry basket practically on my head.”

Richmond Colored Normal School Diploma

Despite her poverty, Walker was among the fortunate Blacks late in the 1870s who attended newly established public schools for African Americans in Richmond. She went to the Lancasterian School, also known as the Valley School, followed by the Navy Hill School and Richmond Colored Normal School, where she was trained as a teacher. After graduating in 1883, she taught for three years at the Valley School. On September 14, 1886, she married Armstead Walker Jr., who worked in his family’s construction and bricklaying business; however, due to a school policy that forbade the employment of married women, she was forced to quit her teaching position. The couple had three sons—Russell Eccles Talmadge Walker was born in 1890; Armstead Mitchell Walker was born in 1893, but died seven months later; and their youngest son, Melvin DeWitt Walker, was born in 1897—and one adopted daughter, Polly Anderson.

In 1904 the Walkers purchased their family home at 110 1/2 East Leigh Street, located in Richmond’s Jackson Ward neighborhood, which was dubbed—as the hub of Richmond’s African American business and cultural life—the “Harlem of the South.” The Walkers opened their home to numerous family members including their children and grandchildren. Over time, the home expanded from nine to twenty-eight rooms to accommodate the rapidly growing family.

The Independent Order of Saint Luke

Grand Fountain of the United Order of True Reformers

In 1881, while still in school, Walker had joined the Independent Order of Saint Luke, an African American fraternal society. The United Order of Saint Luke, the Independent Order’s progenitor, was founded by Mary Prout in 1867 as a Baltimore-based women’s mutual insurance society that provided for the care of the sick and the burial of the dead. The United Order was one of several African American fraternal organizations dedicated to supporting the social and financial advancement of the Black community. According to the historian Joe Trotter, fraternal organizations such as the Independent of Saint Luke and the United Order of True Reformers “helped to shape African American identity…; protected members against poverty and other misfortunes; and supported movements for social change.” Although initially restricted to women, the United Order eventually admitted men. After a factional dispute led by William M. T. Forrester, in 1869 members in Richmond split from the United Order and formed the new Independent Order of Saint Luke. Forrester dominated the Independent Order of Saint Luke for thirty years until 1899, when he abandoned it for fear of its financial collapse.

During the latter part of Forrester’s tenure and after she was forced to abandon her teaching career when she married, Walker rose through the Independent Order of Saint Luke’s ranks and used her positions to continue to influence young people. In 1895, as grand deputy matron, she established the Juvenile Branch of the Independent Order of Saint Luke to instill a sense of community consciousness and confidence in young African Americans. The branch stressed the importance of education and community service. To underscore her belief that the future success of the order and of society itself came from investing in youth, Walker adopted the maxim: “As the twig is bent, the tree is inclined.”

Maggie Walker and the Juvenile Branch of the Independent Order of Saint Luke
Maggie Walker and the Juvenile Branch of the Independent Order of Saint Luke
Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank
Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank
Independent Order of Saint Luke's Staff
Independent Order of Saint Luke’s Staff
Printing Press for the St. Luke Herald
Printing Press for the St. Luke Herald
Maggie Walker and Staff Members of the Independent Order of Saint Luke
Maggie Walker and Staff Members of the Independent Order of Saint Luke

On the eve of the Independent Order of Saint Luke’s bankruptcy, Walker was elected to replace Forrester as Grand Secretary, a post she held until her death in 1934. Having spent sixteen years holding a variety of positions in the organization, Walker brought a diversity of perspectives to her new role. And with that diverse experience, she devoted the rest of her life to building membership and resources, expanding activities in business and social service, and keeping the financial operations efficient. Under Walker’s guidance, the Independent Order of Saint Luke’s fortunes were completely reversed. Although she inherited the order deep in deficit, over the twenty-five years of her leadership it collected nearly $3.5 million, claimed 100,000 members in twenty-four states, and built up almost $100,000 in reserve.

On August 20, 1901, she delivered a now-famous speech before the Independent Order of Saint Luke’s council in which she declared her vision to take the organization to greater heights by creating a conglomerate: a bank chartered and operated by the order’s members, a newspaper to herald the good news of the order, and a department store run by black employees and geared to black consumers with goods they wanted at more affordable prices than those of white retailers. It was through this consolidation of communication, money, and industry that the African American community could become economically independent, mobilized, and self-sustaining. Within five years, Walker guided each of these enterprises to fruition. The St. Luke Herald began operation in 1902, the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank opened for business in November 1903, and the Saint Luke Emporium was in operation by April 1905.

Saint Luke Bank and Trust Company

Of her hope for the bank, Walker declared: “Let us put our moneys together; let us use our moneys; let us put our money out at usury among ourselves, and reap the benefit ourselves … Let us have a bank that will take the nickels and turn them into dollars.” She encouraged young members to start early by opening bank accounts so that their money would grow as they grew and they would be able to achieve economic independence from white employers. The bank’s success was one ingredient that ensured the longevity and stability of Richmond’s black middle class and it also facilitated the increase of Black home ownership in the city. During the Great Depression, while other banks failed, Walker kept the Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank alive by merging it with two other banks to create the Consolidated Bank and Trust Company in 1930. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, the bank continued to exist and was the oldest bank in the United States that has been continuously run by African Americans.

Challenges and Politics

Souvenir Views: Negro Enterprises and Residences

While Walker’s and the Independent Order of Saint Luke’s successes were extraordinary, particularly given the reactionary social and political environment of that time, the white community and Virginia’s state government posed challenges to her vision. After the embezzlement scandal and failure of the United Order of True Reformers’ bank in 1910, the Commonwealth of Virginia mandated that fraternal societies and financial institutions be separate. In compliance, the St. Luke bank became officially independent of the Independent Order of Saint Luke. The Saint Luke Emporium, the retail arm of Walker’s three-part conglomerate that offered African American women opportunities for work and the Black community access to cheaper goods, struggled from its beginnings. As a result of organized opposition from white retailers and reluctance from Black consumers who continued to patronize white businesses (perhaps fearing repercussions if they did not), the emporium could not make money and was forced to close its doors in 1911.

Amidst these obstacles and setbacks to her business, Walker also faced misfortune and tragedy. In June 1915 Russell Walker shot and killed his father after mistaking him for an intruder. He was arrested for murder and, after five months awaiting trial, was declared innocent. Russell Walker never recovered from the accident, however, and after eight years of battling depression and alcoholism, he died on November 23, 1923. Walker developed diabetes and, because of her failing health and a leg wound that never healed, spent the last decade of her life in a wheelchair.

John Mitchell Jr.

Still, as Walker’s reputation as a powerful speaker and entrepreneur continued to grow, she engaged in major civic issues and became an activist against discrimination and segregation. She was cofounder of the Richmond Chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Council of Colored Women. She was one of the organizers of the 1904 boycott that protested the Virginia Passenger and Power Company’s policy of segregated seating on Richmond streetcars. The boycott was so successful that the company went out of business within the year. In 1921 Walker ran on the “Lily Black” Republican ticket (the “Lily Black” Republicans were an all-Black offshoot of the Republican Party) with John Mitchell Jr., editor and publisher of the Richmond Planet. With Mitchell running for governor, Walker sought the post of superintendent of public instruction; however, all of the Black Republicans lost. Somewhat disillusioned by politics (in a journal entry from 1925 she explains her decision to vote for an entirely Democratic ticket by stating that “one party is as good as the other”), she continued to work for change within her community. She was a major contributor to the Industrial Home for Wayward Girls, operated by her friend Janie Porter Barrett. She also was an ardent supporter of the antilynching movement.

Legacy

Walker died on December 15, 1934, of diabetic gangrene. Her funeral was held at Richmond’s First African Baptist Church, of which she had been a longtime member. Her home at East Leigh Street was purchased by the National Park Service in 1979 and converted into a National Historic Site. The Maggie L. Walker Governor’s School for Government and International Studies, a college preparatory school partially funded by the state, was established in 1991.

MAP
TIMELINE
July 15, 1864
Maggie Lena Walker is born in Richmond to Elizabeth Draper, a former slave and a servant in Elizabeth Van Lew's home, and Eccles Cuthbert, a white abolitionist writer.
1867
The United Order of Saint Luke is founded by Mary Prout in Baltimore, Maryland.
1876—1878
Maggie Lena Walker helps her mother by collecting and delivering laundry to white customers and observes disparate economic opportunities for blacks and whites; she also attends school and is baptized in the First African Baptist Church.
February 1876
Maggie Lena Walker's stepfather, William Mitchell, is found drowned in the James River.
1881
Maggie Lena Walker joins the Independent Order of Saint Luke, a black fraternal organization. That same year, she also organizes a black student school strike to protest the inequality of white and black graduation ceremonies.
September 14, 1886
Maggie Lena Walker marries Armstead Walker Jr., a brick contractor.
1890
Maggie Lena Walker's son Russell Eccles Talmadge is born.
1893
Maggie Lena Walker's son Armstead Mitchell is born; he dies seven months later.
1895
Maggie Lena Walker establishes a juvenile branch of the Independent Order of Saint Luke; she becomes grand deputy matron of the branch.
1897
Maggie Lena Walker's son Melvin DeWitt is born.
1899
Maggie Lena Walker is elected Right Worthy Grand Secretary of Saint Luke, its highest rank (she later becomes secretary-treasurer), and retains this position until 1934.
August 20, 1901
Maggie Lena Walker delivers a speech in which she inaugurates her vision of a conglomerate for the Order of Saint Luke: a newspaper, a bank, and a department store to serve the financial and social interests of the black community.
1902
Maggie Lena Walker establishes a newspaper, the St. Luke Herald.
July 28, 1903
Maggie Lena Walker charters Saint Luke Penny Savings Bank and serves as president until 1929.
1904
Armstead Walker Jr. and Maggie Lena Walker move to 110 1/2 East Leigh Street in Richmond.
April 1905
Maggie Lena Walker and other women of the Order of Saint Luke establish the Saint Luke Emporium, a department store owned and run by African Americans for the African American community.
June 1915
Maggie Lena Walker's husband, Armstead Walker Jr., is accidentally shot and killed by their son Russell Walker.
1921
Maggie Lena Walker runs unsuccessfully with John Mitchell Jr. on the "Lily Black" Republican ticket: he for Virginia's governor, she for superintendent of public instruction.
February 12, 1922
Maggie Lena Walker's mother, Elizabeth Mitchell, dies.
November 23, 1923
Maggie Lena Walker's son Russell Walker dies after battling depression and alcoholism.
1927
Maggie Lena Walker receives an honorary masters degree from Virginia Union University.
1928
Maggie Lena Walker is confined to a wheelchair by paralysis.
December 15, 1934
Maggie Lena Walker dies in Richmond of diabetic gangrene; she is buried at Evergreen Cemetery.
FURTHER READING
  • Belsches, Elvatrice Parker. Richmond, Virginia. Black America Series. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing, 2002.
  • Branch, Muriel M., and Dorothy M. Rice. Pennies to Dollars: The Story of Maggie Lena Walker. North Haven, Connecticut: The Shoe String Press, 1997.
  • Dabney, Wendell P. Maggie L. Walker and the I. O. of Saint Luke: The Woman and Her Work. Cincinnati, Ohio: The Dabney Publishing Co., 1927.
  • Marlowe, Gertrude Woodruff. A Right Worthy Grand Mission: Maggie Lena Walker and the Quest for Black Economic Empowerment. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 2003.
  • Sydnor, William. Our Inspiration: The Story of Maggie Lena Walker. VHS. Richmond, Virginia: PBS, 1999.
CITE THIS ENTRY
APA Citation:
Branch, Muriel. Maggie Lena Walker (1864–1934). (2020, December 07). In Encyclopedia Virginia. https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/walker-maggie-lena-1864-1934.
MLA Citation:
Branch, Muriel. "Maggie Lena Walker (1864–1934)" Encyclopedia Virginia. Virginia Humanities, (07 Dec. 2020). Web. 30 Apr. 2024
Last updated: 2024, April 15
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