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Madam C.J. Walker

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Some African American women looked down on her product ... first black woman millionaire. ... scholarships for young women at the Tuskegee Institute. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Madam C.J. Walker


1
Madam C.J. Walker
  • Presented by
  • Melinda Bluhm
  • Jeremy Schartner

2
Beginnings
  • Sarah Breedlove (later changed name to Madam C.J.
    Walker) was born December 23, 1867, in Delta,
    Louisiana.
  • She was the youngest child of Owen and Minerva
    Breedlove.
  • Owen and Minerva were both former slaves who won
    their freedom after the Civil War.

3
Beginnings Continued
  • She had an older brother Alex, and an older
    sister Louvenia.
  • Sarahs family were poor tenant farmers.
  • Owen and Minerva died of yellow fever in 1874
    (when Sarah was 6) when an epidemic swept across
    the Mississippi River delta.

4
Beginnings Continued
  • Alex was later forced to move to Vicksburg and
    then Denver to find work.
  • Sarah and her sister stayed and tried to make a
    living but eventually followed and became
    washerwomen.
  • When Sarah was 11 her sister married Willie
    Powell, who didnt like Sarah.

5
Starting Her Own Life
  • When Sarah was only 14 she married Moses (Jeff)
    McWilliams, mostly to get away from her
    brother-in-law and have a home of her own.
  • On June 6, 1885 (when Sarah was 17) she gave
    birth to their daughter Lelia.
  • Just two years later Moses was killed in an
    accident, leaving Sarah to support herself and
    Lelia.

6
On Her Own
  • In 1888 Sarah moved her and Lelia to St. Louis.
  • Sarah worked hard, maintained high standards and
    drew many customers as a washerwoman.
  • She saved extra earnings, and even made enough
    money so that Lelia could finish high school and
    attend Knoxville College ( a small
    African-American college in Tennessee.)

7
On Her Own Continued
  • While in St. Louis, Sarah joined the St. Paul
    African Methodist Episcopal Church, and became
    active in the missionary group there.
  • As a group they attended the Worlds Fair in 1904
    where Sarah heard Margaret Washington (Booker T.
    Washingtons wife) speak.

8
Inspiration
  • Sarah was impressed by Margarets poise and
    elegance, but most of all by her flawless
    personal appearance and grooming.
  • Margarets example inspired Sarah to do something
    about her own appearance.
  • Sarah had dry, thin hair, and in some places her
    scalp even showed.

9
Changes
  • Sarah tried many different products to try and
    solve her hair problem, but none ever worked.
  • Kitchen Chemistry- she decided to try and
    formulate her own hair treatment, so she
    experimented with combining different
    ingredients.
  • Sarah relied on trial and error because she had
    no educational background in the sciences.

10
Breakthrough
  • Sarah claims she came across the formula to her
    product later called Madam C.J. Walkers
    Wonderful Hair Grower in a dream she had where a
    black man told her what ingredients to mix for
    her hair.
  • She tried it on her hair and it made it shinier,
    healthier, and easier to manage.
  • She had the same results when she tested it on
    friends and relatives.

11
The Walker System
  • She realized that the formula could also be used
    to straighten the natural curls of African
    American hair.
  • The Walker System involved
  • Shampoo
  • A pomade (hair grower) that gave the hair body
  • Glossine to give the hair shine
  • And applying heated metal combs to soften and
    straighten the hair.

12
Mixed Reactions
  • Some African American women looked down on her
    product because they believed they straightened
    their hair to look more like white women.
  • Others saw it as fashion blacks straighten their
    hair to style it, and whites curl their hair.

13
Another Move
  • Sarah decided to move from St. Louis to Denver to
    start her business there.
  • Once there she continued her friendship with a
    man named C.J. Walker who helped her with
    advertising and business advice.
  • She worked as a cook during the day, and
    continued working on new formulas in the evening.
  • She also went door to door at night selling her
    three products at the time
  • Wonderful Hair Grower
  • Glossine
  • Vegetable Shampoo

14
Changes
  • Once she saved enough money she could concentrate
    on expanding her business.
  • Her friendship with C.J. Walker grew and on
    January 4, 1906 they were married.
  • She took his name and added the Madam to add a
    sense of dignity to her products.
  • Soon after, she opened the Madam C.J. Walker
    Manufacturing Company in Denver.

15
New Ventures
  • Once Lelia graduated from college she joined her
    mother and they opened the Lelia College to train
    her hair culturists which were all African
    American women.
  • The hair culturists (Walker Agents) wore uniforms
    of white shirts tucked into a black skirt and
    carried the signature black bags.
  • Every agent had to signed an employment contract
    promising to use only Walker products, and to
    follow certain rules of hygiene.
  • They went door to door selling her products, and
    also styling their customers hair.

16
On Her Own Again
  • Sarah left her daughter in charge of the college
    while she moved on to Indianapolis to set up the
    company headquarters. Business continued to
    boom.
  • A cost to her success came when her and C.J.
    divorced in 1912 because of continued differences
    over the business.
  • He thought she should keep it small, and she kept
    wanting to expand.

17
Millionaire
  • In 1913 Lelia convinced Sarah to move to Harlem.
  • There they opened the Walker beauty salon.
  • In 1918, Sarah was so successful that she became
    a millionaire.
  • She was Americas first black woman millionaire.
  • She built a 30 room mansion in upstate New York,
    on the Hudson River that became called the Villa
    Lewaro.

18
  • By 1918, Walker had high blood pressure and
    failing kidneys.
  • Her doctors ordered her to slow down, but she
    couldnt change her lifestyle.
  • She died on May 25, 1919, from hypertension and
    kidney failure.
  • W.E.B. Dubois wrote It is given to few persons
    to transform a people in a generation. Yet this
    was done by the late Madam C.J. Walker.

19
Contributions
  • She donated a lot of money to the NAACP and the
    YMCA.
  • She established scholarships for young women at
    the Tuskegee Institute.
  • She helped fund the Palmer Institute a private
    secondary school for blacks in North Carolina.
  • She organized her employees into Walker Clubs
    and gave cash prizes to the groups that did the
    most community service.
  • She also helped African Americans by hiring them,
    patronizing their businesses, and encouraging
    black artists and writers.

20
Obstacles
  • Impoverished background
  • No formal education
  • I am a woman who came from the cotton fields of
    the South. I was promoted from there to the
    washtub. Then I was promoted to the cook
    kitchen, and from there I promoted myself into
    the business of manufacturing hair goods and
    preparations. I have built my own factory on my
    own ground.

21
Mentors
  • She didnt really have any mentors.
  • She was inspired by Margaret Washington.
  • It is also believed that when she cooked for Mr.
    Scholtz (pharmacist) she consulted him when
    formulating her products.
  • She wasnt a mentor to anyone but I believe she
    had an influence on the black culture in general,
    and the fact that she was so successful as a
    woman could inspire other women wanting to
    succeed.

22
Pictures
  • Madam C.J. Walker
  • Her birthplace

23
Pictures Continued
  • Walter Manufacturing Co. in Indianapolis

24
  • Villa Lewaro Mansion in New York

25
  • Wonderful Hair Grower
  • Vegetable Shampoo

26
  • Walker with Freeman B. Ransom, Booker T.
    Washington, Alexander Manning, Dr. Joseph Ward,
    and R.W. Bullock.

27
Three Things to Remember
  • She was Americas first black woman millionaire.
  • She invented hair care products for African
    American women.
  • She was an active supporter of African American
    foundations.
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