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Catherine Impey (13 August 1847 – 14 December 1923) was a British Quaker activist against racial discrimination.[1] She founded Britain's first anti-racist journal, Anti-Caste, in March 1888 and edited it until its last edition in 1895. In the first issue, she wrote:[2]

When the curse of negro slavery lay upon the Southland, when it means danger and even death to agitate against it, and philanthropy was ever busy upon the thousand social evils of the day; when men who were timid or indifferent begged to be let alone - there came from the young man William Lloyd Garrison those grand words that are now engraved upon his monument at Boston: "I am in earnest, I will not equivocate, I will not retreat a single inch, and I will be heard."

The journal was inspired[3] by Booker T. Washington's Southern Letter. Impey visited the United States several times from 1878 and the journal focused largely on issues in America. In 1893, she formed The Society for the Recognition of the Universal Brotherhood of Man, with the American Ida B. Wells, who visited the UK[4] to campaign against lynching. Impey became a vegetarian in 1879.[5]

Early life

Impey was born into a Quaker family on 13 August 1847 in Street, Somerset, England. She and her sister Ellen received a Quaker education at Southside House, in nearby Weston-super-mare. Southside required all graduating students to embark on a philanthropic endeavour; Catherine and her sister elected to "help remove oppression among the darker races of the world."[1] Abstaining from drink her entire life, she was a member of the Street Teetotal Society, the British Women's Temperance Association, and the International Order of Good Templars (IOGT) and made advocation of temperance part of her life's work.[1]

Travels

Impey made her first trip to the United States in March 1878 when a schizm in the Good Templars over the issue of integration led to the formation of the Right Worthy Grand Lodge (RWGL). A Good Templar lodge in the US state of Kentucky wanted to join the IOGT, but refused to admit negros as members, whereas the IOGT in England was already integrated. The IOGT decided to permit segregated lodges and the British group split off in protest, forming the RWGL. That year, Impey was named the RWGL's Secretary of the Negro Mission for the United States and sent her to Boston to attend the RWGL conference held in Boston's Pythian Hall.[6]

See also

Further reading

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Simpson, G. R. (January 1925). "Notes: Catherine Impey". The Journal of Negro History. 10 (1). The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Association for the Study of African American Life and History: 104–106 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ Jordan, Brucella Wiggins (2003). Ida B. Wells, Catherine Impey, and trans-Atlantic dimensions of the nineteenth-century anti-lynching movement (PhD thesis). Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, West Virginia University. doi:10.33915/etd.1845. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  3. ^ The Booker T Washington Papers Vol. 3 1889–1895, pp. 33–34, accessed at "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 12 October 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) 27 July 2006.
  4. ^ Vron Ware, Beyond the Pale, White Women, Racism and Slavery, Verso, 1992, p. 175, ISBN 0-86091-552-2 cited in Shula Marks, "'Half-ally, half-untouchable at the same time': Britain and South Africa since 1959", accessed 3 December 2007.
  5. ^ Gregory, James. (2002). "The Vegetarian Movement in Britain c. 1840-1901". eprints.soton.ac.uk. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  6. ^ "Catherine Impey and The Black Atlantic". The Secret History of Scarsdale. 21 February 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2024.