Beatrice Hulon Morrow Cannady (1889-1974)

January 18, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Kimberley Mangun

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Beatrice Hulon Morrow Cannady|

Courtesy Oregon Historical Society|

Civil rights activist, ambassador of interracial goodwill, editor and publisher of the (Portland) Advocate, Oregon’s first African American female to practice law — Beatrice Morrow Cannady spent nearly 25 years working for equal rights for Oregon’s two thousand black citizens.

Born in 1889 in Littig, Texas, Cannady graduated from Wiley College in Marshall, Texas, in 1908. She continued her education at the University of Chicago, but left in 1912 for Portland where she married Edward Daniel Cannady and became editor of the Advocate. Her activities included writing for the weekly newspaper, lecturing to high school and college students, broadcasting during Negro History Week, and holding interracial, interreligious teas to educate whites about black history and eliminate stereotypes. Cannady protested showings of the controversial film The Birth of a Nation, kept readers informed of acts of terror committed by the Oregon Ku Klux Klan, worked to desegregate a school in Vernonia, Oregon, and filed a lawsuit against the Portland School Board for its practice of segregating swimming pools. She graduated from Portland’s Northwestern College of Law in 1922.

In 1929, the Portland Council of Churches nominated her for the Harmon Foundation’s annual award for Distinguished Achievement Among Negroes in the field of race relations. Although the honor went to Tuskegee Institute President Robert R. Moton, contemporaries called her an “outstanding citizen,” and a “leader among the people of her race.” Cannady continued to be active in Portland in the early 1930s, and ran unsuccessfully for the state legislature in 1932. At the end of 1936, she moved to Southern California where she spent the next four decades pursuing the things she was passionate about, though in a far less public way. She wrote for the (Perris, Calif.) Precinct Reporter, and held informal interracial gatherings – “fireside meetings” – at the Perris ranch she shared with her third husband. Cannady died in Los Angeles in 1974.

Author Profile

Kimberley Mangun is an associate professor emerita of communication. She spent her career at The University of Utah, where she taught community reporting; conceptual classes on communication history, alternative media, and diversity; and a graduate seminar on historical research methods. Mangun studied the African American press and representations of women, race, and ethnicity in communication history, subjects she became interested in while in graduate school. An award-winning book, published by Oregon State University Press in 2010, examined the career of Beatrice Morrow Cannady, an editor and publisher who advocated for civil rights in Portland, Oregon, from 1912 until 1936. Mangun’s book was used as the basis for an Oregon Public Broadcasting documentary that premiered in May 2007 and continues to air regularly on OPB. A second award-winning book focused on Emory O. Jackson, the longtime editor of the Birmingham, Alabama, World who fought for equal rights during the key years of the civil rights movement. Mangun’s research has been published in American Journalism, Journalism History, Newspaper Research Journal, Oregon Historical Quarterly, Pacific Northwest Quarterly, African American National Biography, and other print and online publications.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Mangun, K. (2007, January 18). Beatrice Hulon Morrow Cannady (1889-1974). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/cannady-beatrice-hulon-morrow-1889-1974/

Source of the Author's Information:

Kimberley Ann Mangun, “Beatrice Morrow Cannady and the Advocate: Building and Defending Oregon’s African American Community, 1912-1933” (Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Oregon, 2005).

Further Reading