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Henrietta Ray

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henrietta Green Regulus Ray (c. 1808–1836) was an African-American female activist living in New York City who advocated for women's education and independence. She helped found the African Dorcas Association, an organization that worked to provide clothing to students of the African Free School, and she became the organization's secretary in 1828. In 1834, she married Rev. Charles B. Ray, an African-American abolitionist and owner and editor of the Colored American, a weekly newspaper. Around the same time as her marriage, she also was elected as the first president of the New York Female Literary Society, which was "formed for the purpose of acquiring literary and scientific knowledge."[1] She died in 1836 of tuberculosis.[2]

The poet Henrietta Cordelia Ray was named in her honor.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Cornish, Samuel E. (March 4, 1837). "On the Death of Mrs. Ray". The Colored American. New York.
  2. ^ Boylan, Anne (1993). Darlene Clark Hine (ed.). Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia. Brooklyn: Carlson Publishing. p. 966. ISBN 9780926019614.
  3. ^ "Henrietta Ray". African American Registry. Archived from the original on December 22, 2017. Retrieved April 26, 2014.