Ruth Gaines-Shelton

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Born(1872-04-08)April 8, 1872
Glasgow, Missouri
Died1938(1938-00-00) (aged 65–66)
OccupationsPlaywright, educator
Ruth Gaines-Shelton
A woman with fair skin and dark hair, wearing round black glasses, pearls, and a light-colored jacket
Ruth A. Gaines-Shelton, from a 1926 publication
Born(1872-04-08)April 8, 1872
Glasgow, Missouri
Died1938(1938-00-00) (aged 65–66)
OccupationsPlaywright, educator

Ruth Ada Gaines-Shelton (April 8, 1872 – 1938) was an American playwright and educator. She is a playwright of the Harlem Renaissance era and is best known for her allegorical comedy,The Church Fight, written in 1925.

Gaines-Shelton was born on April 8, 1872, in Glasgow, Missouri.[1] Her father was Reverend George W. Gaines, a minister in the African Methodist Episcopal Church and her mother was Mary Elizabeth Gaines. Gaines-Shelton was raised by her father following her mother’s early death when Gaines-Shelton was only a little girl. Throughout her life, Gaines-Shelton assisted her father with church work as he directed the building of the Old Bethel AME Church on Dearborn Street in Chicago.[2] Gaines-Shelton attended Wilberforce University in Ohio and graduated in 1895. She taught in public schools in Montgomery, Missouri from 1894 to 1899. In 1898, Gaines-Shelton married William Osbern Shelton and together they had three children. Gaines-Shelton is most well known for her play The Church Fight (1925) and the play is notable for being one of the first comedies written by an African-American.[3] Gaines-Shelton died in Montgomery, Missouri, in 1938.

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