Lillian A. Lewis
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Lillian A. Lewis | |
|---|---|
Lillian A. Lewis circa 1897 | |
| Born | 1869 |
| Alma mater | Boston Normal School |
| Occupation | Journalist |
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]