Clementina Black
Clementina Black (27 July 1853 – 19 December 1922) was a writer, feminist and pioneering trade unionist.
Life
Clementina Black was born in Brighton, one of the eight children of the solicitor, town clerk and coroner of Brighton, David Black (1817–1892), and his wife, Clara Maria Patten (1825–1875), the daughter of a court portrait painter.[1]
In 1875, Clementina's mother died of a rupture caused by lifting her invalid husband. Clementina, as the eldest daughter, was left in charge of an invalid father and seven brothers and sisters, as well as doing a teaching job. Her siblings included the mathematician Arthur Black and the translator Constance Garnett.[2] She and her sisters moved in the 1880s to Fitzroy Square in London, where she spent her time studying social problems, doing literary work, and lecturing on 18th-century literature. She made the acquaintance of Marxist and Fabian socialists and became a friend of the Marx family.[3]
Writings
Black's first novel, A Sussex Idyl (sic), was published in 1877.
Clementina Black was involved in the problems of working-class women and the emerging trade union movement. In 1886, she became honorary secretary of the Women's Trade Union League and moved an equal pay motion at the 1888 Trades Union Congress. In 1889, she helped form the Women's Trade Union Association, which later became the Women's Industrial Council.
She helped organise the Bryant and May strike in 1888. She was also active in the Fabian Society and the women's suffrage movement.
Alongside reports on social conditions, she wrote seven novels, including An Agitator about a socialist strike leader.[4] She died at her home in Brighton in 1922 and was buried at East Sheen Cemetery, London.[5][6]
Bibliography
Details from the British Library catalogue.
- A Sussex Idyl (novel, London: Samuel Tinsley, 1877)
- Orlando (novel, London: Smith, Elder & Co., 1879)
- Mericas and other stories (London: W. Satchell & Co., 1880)
- Miss Falkland and other stories (London: Lawrence & Bullen, 1892)
- An Agitator (London: Bliss, Sands & Co., 1894)
- The Truck Acts: what they do, and what they ought to do (with Stephen N. Fox. London: Women's Trade Union Association, 1894)
- The Princess Désirée (London: Longmans, 1896)
- The Pursuit of Camilla (London: Pearson, 1899)
- Frederick Walker (London: Duckworth, 1902)
- Kindergarten Plays (verse, London: R. B. Johnson, 1903)
- Sweated Industry and the Minimum Wage (London: Duckworth, 1907)
- Caroline (London, John Murray, 1908)
- A Case for Trade Boards (1909)
- Makers of our Clothes: a case for trade boards. Being the results of a year's investigation into the work of women in London in the tailoring, dressmaking, and underclothing trades (with Adele Meier. London: Duckworth, 1909)
- The Lindleys of Bath (London: Secker, 1911)
- Married Women's Work, with others from the Women's Industrial Council (London: G. Bell & Sons, 1915)
- A New Way of Housekeeping (London: Collins, 1918)
References
- ↑ Ross, Ellen, Slum Travellers: Ladies and London Poverty, 1860–1920.
- ↑ Clementina Black at Spartacus Educational
- ↑ Janet E. Grenier, "Black, Clementina Maria (1853–1922)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2004). Retrieved 2 May 2015, pay-walled.
- ↑ Cornell: Clementina Black http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/womenLit/activism/Black_L.htm
- ↑ Famous graves http://www.famousgraves.net/clementina-black.html
- ↑ "People of historical note buried in the borough A to L". London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. Retrieved 2 January 2016.