Educating, Inspiring, and Motivating Christian Women

Maria W. Stewart – Part I

Is not my word like as a fire? saith the Lord; and like a hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces?”   Jeremiah 23:29

 

MariaStewart_Not until many years after her death was Maria W. Stewart recognized as an underappreciated black female theologian and speaker of the early nineteenth century.

She is believed to be the first American woman to have given a speech before a mixed audience of men and women. It is possible that there were other women speakers before her, but we don’t have copies of their speeches as we do for Maria.

Maria Miller was born in 1803 in Hartford, Connecticut. Other than their last name, we don’t really know anything about Maria’s parents. She was orphaned at the age of five and became a servant girl in the home of a minister. While there she learned to read and became very familiar with the Bible. She understood it so well in fact that one she would later incorporate it into her speeches in very intelligent and appropriate ways.

At about age fifteen, Maria left this family and took a job as a domestic servant in order to support herself. She further educated herself by attending Sabbath schools.

When she was twenty-three, Maria Miller married James W. Stewart at the African Baptist Church in Boston. Maria took not only James’ last name but also his middle initial and thereafter she called herself Maria W. Stewart. James was forty-four years old. He was a veteran of the War of 1812. When he and Maria married he was a successful businessman earning a good income by outfitting whaling ships and fishing vessels. At this time, blacks or colored persons (as they were called then) made up only three percent of the Boston population. The Stewarts were also members of an even smaller society – the black middle class. They had no children and James died only three years later in 1829.

Heartbreak helped to fuel Maria’s zeal for God and His Word and freedom for women and blacks. But first, before she started her remarkable foray into politics, Maria had to try and get her inheritance. James Stewart had left her substantial property, but she was defrauded by the legal machinations of the unscrupulous white businessmen who were the executors of the estate. After a long court battle they took everything from her.

In 1830 Maria underwent a religious conversion that led her to begin to proclaim the Gospel along with social justice. She made a public profession of her faith in Christ and dedicated herself to God’s service. Being black and female did not stop this remarkable woman. She believed that the Scriptures were the authority of God and she could proclaim them as a servant of God no matter what her gender was. She also believed that it was an act of obedience to God to work for freedom for oppressed people. Throughout her life she would be criticized for speaking out, but Maria would point to the authority of God and say that she was simply following God’s will. This was an incredibly bold stance for a black woman to take in 1830. It would be a few years before other women would follow in her footsteps and now there is a great “roll call” of black and white women who boldly proclaimed the Word of God.

Maria’s first published work was entitled, ” Religion and the Pure Principles of Morality, the Sure Foundation on Which We Must Build”. This appeared as a twelve-page pamphlet, priced at six cents, published in 1831. Soon after this, Maria began her public speaking.

The main thrust of Maria’s speeches was to encourage black women to turn to God. She also urged them to stand up for their rights and not remain silent. She showed that free black women were little better off than the slaves. The only employment they could get was as servants to white people and many were as mistreated as she was. After all, she should know because she was cheated out of her inheritance. Being black and female was the bottom of the totem pole.

While speaking out against the unfairness of the white man’s world, Maria also boldly lectured the blacks themselves for doing little to better their own plight. “It is useless for us any longer to sit with our hands folded, reproaching the whites; for that will never elevate us,” she said.

Maria continued to write articles for publication. In 1832, the famous publisher William Lloyd Garrison published another article entitled, “Meditations from the Pen of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart.” He also printed transcripts from all of her speeches, but going along with the social requirements of those days he put them in the “Ladies” Department” of the paper.

Maria Stewart continued to speak and write for only two more years. She had encountered so much opposition that she decided to leave Boston. She delivered her last speech on September 21, 1833 announcing her decision. She was truly sorry that even people who agreed with her did not like her speaking in public.

She did not just fade away. Maria refused to go quietly, asserting that women activists had divine sanction: “What if I am woman; is not the God of ancient times the God of these modern days? Did he not raise up Deborah, to be a mother, and a judge in Israel? Did not Queen Esther save the lives of the Jews? And Mary Magdalene first declare the resurrection of Christ from the dead?”

Maria moved to New York where she became a teacher and taught in Manhattan public schools. She continued her political activities, joining many women’s organizations. She did lecture occasionally, but none of these have survived.
In 1852, Maria moved to Baltimore. Here she earned a living as a teacher. In 1861, she moved to Washington D. C. where she operated a school. By the 1870’s she had been appointed a matron at the Freedman’s Hospital and Asylum in Washington. Maria continued to teach even as she worked at the hospital caring for patients.

Finally, in 1878, a year before her death, congress passed a law granting pensions to widows of veterans of the War of 1812. (Big of them, wasn’t it? How many widows could there be sixty-six years after the end of the war?) Anyway, this money enabled Maria to publish a second edition of “Meditations from the Pen of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart”. It also included new sections, an autobiographical essay and an introduction calling for an end to tyranny and oppression of underprivileged peoples.

Maria died in 1879 at the Freedman’s Hospital at the age of 76. There was an obituary in The People’s Acvocate, giving this recognition to Maria Stewart: “Few, very few know of the remarkable career of this woman whose life has just drawn to a close. For half a century she was engaged in the work of elevating her race by lectures, teaching, and various missionary and benevolent labors.” Maria was buried in Graceland Cemetery in Washington on December 17, 1879—50 years to the day after her husband’s death.
(Continued in Part II, next week.)

 

 

 

6 responses to “Maria W. Stewart – Part I”

  1. A two-part post on Stewart and you never mention your use of a published source under copyright? How Christian/ethical is that?

    Sincerely,
    Marilyn Richardson

    • This blog is just a place for stories. If you are doing research, look up “Sisters of the Spirit: Three Black Women’s Autobiographies of he Nineteenth Century.” I find your accusation against my Christian character small minded. Why don’t you just ask in a nice way what my sources are?

  2. If you have your copy of “Sisters of the Spirit” handy, you’ll notice that I wrote the introduction. It’s a fine collection.

    As for my tone, I take your point. It’s just really frustrating to see one’s work –“Maria W. Stewart, America’s First Black Woman Political Writer” (Indiana University Press) — thinly paraphrased and sent out into the world without attribution. That small book took an enormous amount of research. It really was a first, and returned Stewart to the canon. I am glad you found it interesting and useful.

    I should add that the photo you use, that has appeared online identified as Stewart, is undocumented. I’ve traced it back to a particular academic who does not return calls or email. As you might imagine, I’ve spent decades looking for an image of Stewart. If you can find a way to verify the one you use, I’d be delighted, and hope you’ll let me know.

    P.S. If you look me up on Google, you’ll see that, among other things, I once taught at the Harvard Divinity School. Ethics are ethics. 😉

    – Marilyn Richardson

    • Thank you so much for responding again. I know how much work research is. “Sisters of the Spirit” was actually not the only book I referenced, but I did not want to go into a great long review of documentation. I think that my audience just wants to read stories of courageous women and be inspired. I hope that those who take an exceptional interest in someone I write about will do what I did – go out and get some books and read them.
      Thank you for all of your work.

    • I also forgot to mention that if you go to the “Reviews” part of my blog postings you will find the books that I use. I give full credit there.

  3. Hello again. I scrolled through your “Reviews” section and found nothing about my book on Stewart there. As the standard reference work on the subject, it is not at all obscure.

    So let’s be clear. The vast majority of the information you have printed above comes from Marilyn Richardson, ed., “Maria W. Stewart, America’s First Black Woman Political Writer,” Indiana University Press.

    Nor did I find a reference to William Andrews’ “Sisters Of The Spirit” which we discussed in these messages and from which you borrow at great length. “Storytelling” is absolutely no excuse for failing to credit sources. Nor is thanking me for giving the info here.

    I trust all who read this blog are aware of proper and legal citation practice and will encourage this blogger to act responsibly and update her earlier entries to acknowledge her sources, and to correct her practice going forward. A few lines of titles and authors at the end of each entry should do it. Such an odd moral lapse in building a religious site.

    Sincerely,
    Marilyn Richardson

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I think some people would understand the quintessence of sanctifying grace if they could be black about twenty-four hours.

~ Amanda Berry Smith