Helen Brown fought discrimination her entire life

Siblings Helen Elizabeth Brown, born in 1898, and Aaron W. Brown, born in 1901, grew up at 715 N. 22nd at the turn of the 20th century.
In 1911, their father, Aaron H. Brown Sr., battled the Quincy Board of Education for the right to send his son and daughter to nearby Dewey School at 2040 Cherry instead of the required all-black Lincoln School on 11th Street, many more blocks away. They did not win that fight. But the seeds of injustice had been planted, and Helen had connections to civil rights movements and fought discrimination her entire life.
The Browns went on to graduate from Quincy Senior High School, which was integrated, in 1919. Helen and Aaron left Quincy soon after for college.
As Quincy youths, they were involved in many activities through school, church and the musical community. The family worshipped at the Eighth and Elm Street Baptist Church (now First Baptist Church). The siblings were members of the church's Culture Club, which met weekly. During a February 1913 meeting, Helen presented a paper on "The Boyhood of George Washington."
In 1915 Aaron, Jr. made the honor roll at Madison School.
In 1917 Helen recited the Gettysburg Address during another Culture Club program honoring President Abraham Lincoln. Lucille Berry recited the Emancipation Proclamation, and the choir sang patriotic songs. Aaron gave a presentation about the importance of a social center for Quincy's youths. American flags and pictures of Lincoln decorated the church, as they did at every Emancipation Day celebration.
As a young church member, Helen was secretary of the Sunday school. In later years, she recalled meeting the famous anti-lynching crusader Ida B. Wells on convention trips for the Eighth and Elm Street Baptist Church. Wells had visited Quincy and had given public speeches in 1895 and 1900.
While a student at Quincy Senior High School, Helen was involved with the music department. In September 1919 she performed a solo at an N.A.A.C.P. meeting at the A.M.E. church at 9th and Oak. Aaron was athletic and played baseball and "soccer ball" for QHS.
After graduation, the siblings went to Howard University in Washington, D.C., a historically black college founded in 1867. Neither graduated, but they were students when distinguished historian Carter G. Woodson was dean of the liberal arts department. Woodson was one of the first scholars to research black American history, and in 1926 he initiated Black History Week, which would become Black History Month in 1976. Woodson chose the second week in February because Lincoln's birthday was Feb. 12 and the birthday of Frederick Douglass was Feb. 14.
Aaron eventually moved to Red Wing, Iowa, and little is known about his later life. Helen attended the Conservatory School of Music at Howard, and in the summer of 1920 she got a job in Newark, N.J., as a stenographer. While living in New Jersey, she attended the National Baptist Convention. After attending classes at Howard, she moved to New York City and became a student of composer Harry Burleigh, who was organizing a book on old plantation spirituals. She traveled to Southern states that were still recovering from slavery, trekking to rural communities that seldom had visitors. She listened to former slaves and their descendants and recorded those spirituals on paper to be translated to song when she returned to New York.
She took notes and also memorized the melodies that were "crooned by the mammy to the babe in its cradle, and carried on by the growing youngsters."
Brown was one of Burleigh's top researchers, and her work on Southern trips was a great resource. The Quincy Daily Herald documented some of her work in a 1925 article.
Helen fell in love with urban life in New York and made a home there. As a young woman she relished living in the cosmopolitan area where she could attend plays and concerts, as well as read and do research at libraries and bookstores. She worked for a time in a Long Island factory, and one day traveled alone to Carnegie Hall in Manhattan to get tickets for her co-workers to attend a performance there. Some of her Long Island friends had never heard of Carnegie Hall.
Brown became a member of the famous Harlem church, Abyssinian Baptist, a house of worship that appealed to many black Americans moving to the city. She worked in a Harlem bookstore for a black businessman, a unique job for an black woman when many had domestic and cleaning jobs.
During the early 1990s, Martia Goodson, a professor at Baruch College in Harlem and a member of Abyssinian Baptist Church, held interviews with elderly members of the church. Helen Brown was in her 90s then and told some exciting tales about her early life in both Quincy and New York. She recounted her days as a young secretary at Eighth and Elm Street Baptist Church in Quincy, and her meeting Ida B. Wells. She said she and the other children did not realize Wells' importance at the time. Brown and other church members recalled picketing stores in Harlem that would not hire black employees. They also boycotted bus companies that refused to hire black drivers. They developed a controversial summer program to create exchanges with white families in Vermont during the 1940s, when such a blend of races was rare. These working women fought for decent jobs and opportunities for black people in New York. They also worked in the church together, teaching Sunday school, singing in choirs and ushering during Sunday services.
The Brown siblings came of age in Quincy, and their achievements are remembered 100 years after leaving the city.
Heather Bangert is involved with several local history projects. She is a member of Friends of the Log Cabins, has given tours at Woodland Cemetery and John Wood Mansion, and is an archaeological field/lab technician.
Sources:
"Advancement Association to Hold Big Meeting." Quincy Daily Whig, Sept. 3, 1919.
Arrington, Austin. "Giving Thanks for Church Ladies." The Harlem Times, February 2013.
"Colored Baptists Elect Sunday School Officers." Quincy Daily Journal, Jan. 12, 1915.
"Deaths." Quincy Daily Journal, July 29, 1923, p. 3.
Goodson, Martia G., "Church Ladies: Untold Stories of Harlem Women in the Powell Era." AuthorHouse, October 2015.
"Harlem Church Ladies Get Their Due." Baruch Alumni Magazine, Jan. 25, 2016.
"Negro Community News Notes." Quincy Daily Whig, May 23, 1920.
"Program of the Culture Club." Quincy Daily Whig, Feb. 23, 1913.
"Spirituals of Negroes Set to Music: Helen Brown, Quincy Negro Girl, Making Name in the East." Quincy Daily Herald, Nov. 25, 1925.
"Sunday School Selects Officers for the Year: Eight and Elm Street Baptist Selects Leaders for 1915." Quincy Daily Whig, Jan. 12, 1915.





