Author Archives: Phoenix

You have to have something to sell!!!

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Standing ResilienceSamuel B. Fuller’s is a classic tale of American entrepreneurship and resilience. He would climb to the pinnacle of the cosmetics manufacturing industry, fall to bankruptcy and rise again. Through it all he preached a philosophy of self-help that would inspire his workers but eventually cause him to run afoul of the NAACP. Fuller was born in 1905 in Ouatchie, Louisiana. He was the first of seven children born to sharecropper parents and started selling door to door at age nine. He dropped out of school in the sixth grade.
When he was 15, his family moved to Memphis.His mother died two years later leaving behind seven children. His father is believed to have moved to Chicago in search of greener pastures. Fuller married at 18 and managed to keep his siblings of the dole. In 1928, he would hitchhike to Chicago where he first worked first in a coal yard, and then as a burial insurance salesman. He would send for his wife and children and they invested $25 in soap which he sold door to door. By 1929, he founded the Fuller Products Company. He continued to have success with the insurance company and was promoted to manager in 1933 even as he established a line of 30 products and hired additional sales people. By 1939 he set up a small factory and had becomes of the Chicago’s leading black business owners. All this in the midst of the Great Depression.
Quiet ResilienceIn 1947, Fuller purchased, Boyer International Laboratories—a cosmetics company whose brands targeted white Southerners—but kept the purchase secret from customers though sales agents were brought to Chicago and apprised of Fuller’s long-term goals for the company. White southerners would eventually account for as much as 60% of his annual sales which was spread across 38 states. By 1951 the company had a staff in excess of 3,000 people and by 1956, Fortune would report that Fuller’s gross sales were $18 million. In 1963, Fuller would control 9 corporations, including the Fuller Guaranty Company (financial services), the Fuller-Philco Appliance Center, substantial investments in real estate, the Pittsburgh Courier Publishing Company and the Regal Theatre (a Chicago cinema).
Selling ResilienceIn 1964 Fuller experience a series of blows. The SEC put him on probation for selling unregistered promissory notes and ordered him to repay $1.6 million in loans. A social service agent lead a campaign against him for lending to welfare recipients, telling them not to pay their debts, leaving Fuller with more than $1 million in non-performing loans and forcing him to close his department store. The White Citizens Council organized a devastating boycott of his products which pushed sales of Jean Nadal down to zero. Fuller was also boycotted by the NAACP (of which he was a former chapter president) for having argued that black people suffered because of a “lack of understanding of the capitalist system” and arguing that they should spend less time trying to change white people’s attitudes and more time focusing on the lack of motivation and entrepreneurship among black people. By 1969, Fuller was bankrupt.
He did not quit.He re-organized his businesses and as soon as 1972 he was able to report profits of $300,000. By 1975, he was honored by other black entrepreneurs with Jet reporting George Johnson as saying “if there had been no you, there would have been no us.” In the 1950S Fuller had allowed Johnson to use his facilities as Johnson’s own cosmetics firm recovered from a fire. Fuller died in 1998 but his company continues to distribute products through the Northeast and the South.

In celebration of Black History Month, our regular Tuesday and Friday posts will highlight black entrepreneurs who have displayed exemplary success and resilience.

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Black History Month: Youth

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Black History Month: Langston Hughes—Youth

We have to-morrow
Bright before us
Like a flame

Yesterday, a night-gone thing
A sun-down name

And dawn to-day
Broad arch above the road we came,
We march!
—Langston Hughes

In celebration of Black History Month, we will post an inspirational cultural item each day.

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Happy Amos Fortune Day

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In 1955, New Hampshire Governor Lane Dwinell would declare 20th February Amos Fortune Day.
We join in this celebration of an exemplar of resilience and good citizenship.

We have reproduced the text of Governor Dwinell’s declaration below.

WHEREAS, AMOS FORTUNE, Negro, born in 1710 free in Africa, made a slave and sold in America, did by the strength of his character and by his industry surmount almost impossible obstacles to become a free and distinguished citizen of Nev‘ Hampshire, and

WHEREAS, said AMOS FORTUNE, though for many years a slave, did acquire an education above average for his time, did become an expert tanner and did purchase freedom for himself and three other slaves, and

WHEREAS AMOS FORTUNE did not only by his life exemplify the highest obligations of good citizenship but on his death in 1801 did bequeath to the church and school of Jaffrey, New Hampshire, sums of money to be used in the furtherance of religion and education, and

WHEREAS, the day, February 20, is part of America’s Negro History Week and American Brotherhood Week

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Lane Dwinell, Governor of the State of New Hampshire, in behalf of our people, do proclaim the day February 20, 1955 to be AMOS FORTUNE DAY, and I do call upon the citizens of New Hampshire to consider on that day their obligations of tolerance and good citizenship.

For more on Amos Fortune, please see last Friday’s post
For more on Negro History Week, see our post on the origins of Black History Month.

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Black History Month: Like a Strong Tree

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Black History Month: Claude McKay—Like a Strong Tree

Poet of ResilienceLike a strong tree that in the virgin earth
Sends far its roots through rock and loam and clay,
And proudly thrives in rain or time of dearth,
When the dry waves scare rainy sprites away;
Like a strong tree that reaches down, deep, deep,
For sunken water, fluid underground,
Where the great-ringed unsightly blind worms creep,
And queer things of the nether world abound:

So would I live in rich imperial growth,
Touching the surface and the depth of things,
Instinctively responsive unto both,
Tasting the sweets of being and the stings,
Sensing the subtle spell of changing forms,
Like a strong tree against a thousand storms.

——Claude McKay

In celebration of Black History Month, we will post an inspirational cultural item each day.

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Bootstrapping Bootblacking Tarheel

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“As long as it is God’s will, I want this institution to move, for men to support their families; and God will let it live. That is what I am interested about and God knows it. I want this institution to live and she will!”—John Merrick

Resilience in NCThe North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company is the United States’ oldest black-owned business and was for decades the largest. It was built by John Merrick and a consortium of black North Carolinians. Merrick was born into slavery in 1859. By age 12, he was working in a brickyard to help support his family. He would become a brickmason but opted to work as a bootblack because he wanted to learn about barbershops which thought would offer the best opportunity for entrepreneurship. He left Raleigh for the less established Durham for similar reasons. By 1881 Merrick would own a share of a barbershop and a growing real estate portfolio. In time, he would own as many as nine barbershops and co-own the Merrick-Moore-Spaulding Land Company.

His start in insurance came with his purchase of the Royal Knights of King David, a benevolent society providing burial insurance. In 1898, this became the North Carolina Mutual Insurance Company. At the start, the company was on life support. For years, it depended on infusions of cash from Merrick and other prominent African Americans in the Raleigh-Durham area. However, through the dedicated and able management of Charles Spaulding—a young nephew of Dr Aaron Moore, Merrick’s partner in the land company—NC Mutual was saved and survives to this day.

Merrick was also an early investor in the Mechanics and Farmers Bank, a co-founder of the Bull City Drug company and the Durham Textile mill (which failed due to poor management soon after Merrick’s death). NC Mutual continues to serve thousands of North Carolinians.

By remaining resolute in a hostile environment, meeting the challenges of turning around a failing institution and being willing to try new and varied things despite/because of youth and limited education, John Merrick exemplifies the resilient entrepreneur.

For more on Merrick see R. McCants Andrew’s biography at UNC’s Documenting the American South

In honor of Black History Month, our regular Tuesday and Friday posts will highlight black entrepreneurs who have displayed exemplary success and resilience.

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Black History Month: The Struggle Makes You Stronger

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Black History Month: Booker T. Washington—Up From Slavery, Chapter 2.

Testament to ResilienceExcerpted below are a few paragraphs from the second chapter of Booker T. Washington’s memoir, Up From Slavery.
When one considers the circumstances of a black child in nineteenth century Virginia one realizes two things:

  1. Successful persons have come out of even the most trying circumstances
  2. Resilience can be forged and cultivated in these trying circumstances

Booker T Washington and Maggie Lena Walker, both from the same state and overlapping eras were on very different sides of the race debate, yet their lives bear testament to the truth that the human capacity for achievement and resilience is a powerful force.

In those days, and later as a young man, I used to try to picture in my imagination the feelings and ambitions of a white boy with absolutely no limit placed upon his aspirations and activities. I used to envy the white boy who had no obstacles placed in the way of his becoming a Congressman, Governor, Bishop, or President by reason of the accident of his birth or race. I used to picture the way that I would act under such circumstances; how I would begin at the bottom and keep rising until I reached the highest round of success.

In later years, I confess that I do not envy the white boy as I once did. I have learned that success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome while trying to succeed. Looked at from this standpoint, I almost reached the conclusion that often the Negro boy’s birth and connection with an unpopular race is an advantage, so far as real life is concerned. With few exceptions, the Negro youth must work harder and must perform his tasks even better than a white youth in order to secure recognition. But out of the hard and unusual struggle through which he is compelled to pass, he gets a strength, a confidence, that one misses whose pathway is comparatively smooth by reason of birth and race.

From any point of view, I had rather be what I am, a member of the Negro race, than be able to claim membership with the most favoured of any other race. I have always been made sad when I have heard members of any race claiming rights or privileges, or certain badges of distinction, on the ground simply that they were members of this or that race, regardless of their own individual worth or attainments.

——Booker T. Washington, Up From Slavery
In celebration of Black History Month, we will post an inspirational cultural item each day.

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