Lillian A. Lewis

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Born1869 (1869)
OccupationJournalist
Lillian A. Lewis
Lillian A. Lewis circa 1897
Born1869 (1869)
Alma materBoston Normal School
OccupationJournalist

Lillian A. Lewis (born in 1869) was the first African American woman journalist in Boston, Massachusetts.[1] She started her career in the 1880s with the Boston Advocate, a Black community newspaper, and began writing for the Boston Herald in the 1890s. To disguise her gender, she used the pen name "Bert Islew."[2]

Lillian Alberta Lewis was born in 1869 in Boston, Massachusetts.[3] She was born at 66 Phillips Street in Beacon Hill, in the home of Lewis Hayden, who was a Black abolitionist and master of Boston's Underground Railroad.[3] She attended the Bowdoin Grammar School, Girls' High School where she graduated in 1886, and Boston Normal School.[3][4][5]

Lewis was reportedly a gifted student with an interest in literature. While in high school, she began writing and delivering lectures on subjects such as temperance, usually with a thread of humor running through them. One lecture that was especially popular was "The Mantle of the Church Covereth a Multitude of Humbugs," which poked fun at pious hypocrisy.[6]

On August 7, 1901, she married Ernest F. Feurtado, a Jamaican.[7]

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