Katherine Davis Chapman Tillman (1870-?)

January 21, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Alicia Rivera

|Katherine Davis Chapman

Katherine Davis Chapman

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Kate Chapman was born February 19, 1870 in Mount City, Illinois.  She began writing very early in life. Her family moved to Yankton, South Dakota where her father established a hunting dog breeding business valued at $50 to $100 and owned a home valued at $2,500 in 1889. Katherine attended high school in Yankton and then Louisville State University in Kentucky. She married G.M. Tillman in 1894.

Kate Chapman began writing “to the young women of [her] race” as a teenager. Chapman’s work was published mostly by A.M.E. Church Review and consisted of short stories, poems and plays. She also wrote inspirational prose, and prose aimed to teach women ideals of domesticity.  Her essay written in 1895 “Afro-American Women and their Work,” asserts: “Women have always a mission in the world. Since God made Eve in the fair Gardens of Paradise as a helpmate unto Adam, it has been woman’s task to aid man in his stupendous undertakings.” However, her writings also affirm women’s equality to men.  Her poetry as well as her prose reflected her extensive knowledge of historical literature and politics of her time. Repeatedly, she notes that her goal was to write so that she would uplift her race, especially young women.  One of her many poems appears below:

“Swiftly cometh the glad New Year
Leaving in throes of pain
The dying year whose reign is o’er,
And who never will come again.”
From The Glad New Year

The date of Kate Chapman’s death is unknown.

About the Author

Author Profile

Alicia J. Rivera is currently an Assistant Professor in history at California State University, Fresno in Fresno, California. She is a registered nurse who in her latter years became interested in American history, particularly in issues of labor and race. Ms. Rivera has received many awards for her work, among them California State, Fresno Social Science’s Dean’s Medal and a Ronald E. McNair Scholarship while attending California State University–Fresno. She holds a BSN from the University of Costa Rica and a BSA and a MA in history from California State University, Fresno. Ms. Rivera’s work has been published in numerous encyclopedias such as Encyclopedia of African American Biography. Her work on the San Diego Superior Court Case, Lemon Grove v. Roberto Alvarez was published in The Journal of Latin/Latino American Studies, (JOLLAS).

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Rivera, A. (2007, January 21). Katherine Davis Chapman Tillman (1870-?). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/tillman-katherine-davis-chapman-1870/

Source of the Author's Information:

The Works of Katherine Davis Chapman Tillman, ed. Claudia Tate, The Schomburg Library of Nineteenth-Century Black Women Writers, (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991). Williard B. Gatewood, Jr., “Kate D. Chapman Reports of the ‘Yankton Colored People,’ 1889,” South Dakota History 7:1 (Winter 1976):32-35.

Further Reading