RIAMCO

Rhode Island Archival and Manuscript Collections Online

For Participating Institutions

Nellie B. Nicholson scrapbook (OF.1ZP.2025.004)

Brown University Library

Box A
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
Telephone: Manuscripts: 401-863-3723; University Archives: 401-863-2148
Email: Manuscripts: hay@brown.edu; University Archives: archives@brown.edu

Biographical/Historical Note

The following was copied from the Biographical Database of African American Suffragists and slightly edited on April 14, 2025. Original text was written by Helene Carey, University of Delaware and edited by Anne M. Boylan, University of Delaware. Some information was added for this finding aid.

Nellie B. Nicholson was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on July 22, 1888, the youngest of five children of George W. and Charlotte Nicholson. Her father, a waiter and then a janitor, had served in the 39th Regiment Maryland Infantry as part of the United States Colored Troops during the Civil War. Her mother was a skilled seamstress and dressmaker. After attending Baltimore Colored Training School for her high school education, Nicholson moved to Providence, Rhode Island, in 1906 to attend Pembroke College, the women's college in Brown University. There, she played on the basketball, bowling, and tennis teams. She received her A.B. in 1911. While in Providence, she lived at a "Working Girls Club" at 45 East Transit Street. Brown's few Black students were not permitted to live on campus. Founded in 1898 and incorporated in 1902, the club was one of a number of such urban institutions established by middle-class Black women's associations to provide low-cost, safe living quarters for young single working women and college students. During Nicholson's time in Providence, the residence's executive board was headed by Roberta J. Dunbar, who provided energetic service to the New England Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, an affiliate of the National Association of Colored Women as well as to the Rhode Island Federation of Women's Clubs, of which she later became president.

Upon completion of her studies, Nicholson returned to Baltimore to join the faculty at the Colored Training School, teaching education, arithmetic, and English. By 1914, she had moved to Wilmington, Delaware, to fill a position as a mathematics teacher at Howard High School where she also later taught English. In Wilmington, she lived on East 10th Street, where so many Howard School teachers lived that students referred to it as "Teachers' Row." The 1920 census found her living in the household of Caroline B. Williams, Howard's geography teacher, at 202 East 10th Street, where other residents included another teacher, Helen Henderson, a Howard High School student from Maryland, Cora Berry, and Caroline Williams's sister, Elizabeth Williams Tyler, a nurse staffing a local health clinic.

Nicholson married William H. Taylor, a widower with three children, in 1928. She continued to teach at Howard High School, commuting daily from her new home in Philadelphia until her husband's sudden death in 1930, when she returned to live in Wilmington. Two of her step-daughters then attended and graduated from Howard High School. She undertook further study at the University of Pennsylvania, receiving her Master's degree in Mathematics Education in 1931 with a thesis on the teaching of algebra. She completed additional coursework toward a doctoral degree, but did not finish a dissertation. After a brief stint as advisor for girls at the high school, she was promoted to vice-principal in 1931, an appointment she filled until her retirement in 1958.

During her teaching career, Nicholson was surrounded by many other Black women, particularly fellow teachers and other college-educated women. This led to her involvement in groups such as the Zeta Omega chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority in Wilmington, of which she became the second chapter president in 1923, following her colleague, Oberlin College graduate, Latin teacher Anna Brodnax. For the National Association of College Women, of which Brodnax was vice-president, Nicholson served on the executive board, beginning in 1925, and became a life member in 1943. With another colleague, English teacher Sadie L. Jones, she founded a local Delaware affiliate, the Women's College Club of Delaware. The group dedicated itself to improving the "educational condition of Negro girls," ending "dormitory discrimination," promoting "equality of opportunity," and sponsoring scholarships for Black college women. In 1925, she also joined the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, one of only ten Delaware teachers who belonged to the association.

Howard High School teachers formed a core element of the Equal Suffrage Study Club, founded in March 1914, at the home of Nicholson's neighbor, Emma Gibson Sykes. Nicholson was a founding member. With Howard's renowned English teacher, Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar (later Dunbar-Nelson) as president, the group quickly organized to study and agitate for Black women's voting rights, meeting regularly, marching as a separate unit in Wilmington's first suffrage parade in May 1914, and lobbying for both state and national suffrage amendments between 1915 and 1920. Once the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, the Suffrage Club reorganized in order to encourage Black women to register and vote. Many of the Suffrage Club members were also involved in initiating a Wilmington chapter of the NAACP, chartered in January 1915. Along with colleagues Alice Dunbar, Caroline B. Williams, and Alice G. Baldwin, Nicholson signed on as an early supporter, and agreed to take charge of press relations for the fledgling group. She remained an active member for decades, during which the group successfully protested the screening of the film "The Birth of a Nation" in Wilmington, campaigned to get newspapers to capitalize the word "Negro," worked to ring in justice through lawsuits seeking fair treatment in jobs and equal benefits for Black soldiers, and supported the Dyer anti-lynching bill.

Throughout her years as Howard High School vice-principal, Nicholson was heavily involved in the Wilmington community; well after her retirement, she continued to live an active life. She was a long-time member of St. Matthew's Episcopal Church, where two colleagues in the Equal Suffrage Study Club, Blanche Williams Stubbs and Emma Gibson Sykes, also worshipped. She gave time to the Red Cross, the United Negro College Fund, and the Wilmington "colored" YWCA, that Nicholson founded in 1935. She was also the President of the New Castle County Retired Teachers' Association. In 1957, as Delaware was responding to a Supreme Court order to desegregate its schools, and shortly before she retired, she took the lead in facilitating conversations across racial lines at a three-day conference of the Delaware Council of Churches and United Church Women of Delaware.

Nicholson died at her Wilmington home, 1509 West 6th Street, on December 20, 1965. Her estate, valued at almost $12,000, was managed by lawyer Louis Lorenzo Redding, who in the early 1950s had prepared and argued three major court cases leading to university and public school desegregation in Delaware, and who, in his youth, had been her neighbor on "Teachers' Row" and her student at Howard High School. She was buried in the historic Eden Cemetery in Collingdale, Pennsylvania, the final resting place not only of her late husband, but also of such notable human rights advocates as James Forten, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, and William Still.