Biography
Eartha Mary Magdalene White, a prominent African-American
resident of Jacksonville, Florida, was widely known for her humanitarian
and philanthropic endeavors in northeast Florida. Born on November 8, 1876, and
reared by her adoptive, altruistic mother, Clara English White, Eartha
White displayed a lifelong commitment to helping others. Her adoptive
father, Lafayette, left little influence on her life as he died in
1881, five years after her birth. After the death of her husband, Clara
White, the daughter of two former slaves, was left with the necessity
of supporting her daughter and herself through work as a maid and later
as a hotel and steamboat stewardess. A pious woman and fervent humanitarian,
Clara White was a prime role model, and mother and daughter became
a deeply committed team in their unflagging dedication to helping others.
Indeed, Eartha White later embraced her mother's motto as her own: "Do
all the good you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you
can, for all the people you can, while you can."
In 1893, upon graduation from Stanton School in Jacksonville,
Eartha White moved to New York City for a brief period, to avoid a yellow
fever quarantine in Jacksonville. She attended the Madam Hall Beauty School
and the National Conservatory of Music. The latter affiliation led to a
job with the Oriental American Opera Company, called the first African-American
opera company in the United States. A lyric soprano, she sang under the
direction of J. Rosamond Johnson (brother of James Weldon Johnson), and
in the company of musical luminaries of the time such as Madam Plato and
Sidney Woodward. After a highly successful opening on Broadway in New York
City, the troupe traveled widely for a year throughout the United States
and Europe.
Upon returning to Florida in 1896, she decided to continue
her education and subsequently graduated from Florida Baptist Academy.
With degree in hand, she embarked on a sixteen-year teaching career in
Bayard, Florida, and later at Stanton School in Jacksonville.
At the same time, Miss White also displayed considerable
business acumen, as evidenced by her various entrepreneurial endeavors,
including the ownership of a dry goods store, an employment and housecleaning
bureau, a taxi company, and a steam laundry with the catchy motto:"Put
your duds in our suds, we wash anything but a dirty conscience." Her
versatility and determination also enabled her to become a licensed real
estate broker, the first woman employee of the Afro-American Life Insurance
Company in Jacksonville, and a charter member of the National Negro Business
League and Jacksonville Business League. Due to her numerous businesses
and astute real estate transactions, it is estimated that she accumulated
over one million dollars in assets throughout her lifetime. According to
Dr. Daniel Schafer, biographer of Eartha White, she donated most of these
profits from private investments to finance her humanitarian works and,
as a consequence, struggled financially throughout her life.
Her work and influence also extended to political activities,
through her participation in the Republican Party and her formation
of the Colored Citizens Protective League in Jacksonville. In 1941,
she joined with A. Philip Randolph to protest job discrimination.
But, it was particularly in her later years that she became an influential
force whom Jacksonville politicians consulted on diverse issues and
who routinely granted her social welfare requests. To wit, former
Jacksonville mayor Hans Tanzler was quoted, in a 1982 Florida Times-Union
article, "At least once a month she'd come to my office at City
Hall. She was irrepressible and undeniable. She could not be denied.
She only came up to my waist but she'd point that little finger at
me and she'd tell me, `God has chosen you and you must do this, that
and the other thing.' "
As admirable as Eartha White's diverse educational and
business activities may have been, her enduring legacy continues to be
focused on her social welfare work and zeal for helping the underprivileged.
Her accomplishments in this arena are astounding: extensive social work
with prison inmates, the establishment of an orphanage for African-American
children, a home for unwed mothers, a nursery for children of working mothers,
a tuberculosis rest home, a nursing home for elderly African-Americans
(1902), the Boys' Improvement Club (1904), and the Clara White Mission
for the Indigent (1928). A major achievement and fulfillment of a lifelong
dream was the dedication of the Eartha M. M. White Nursing Home in 1967
to replace the Mercy Hospital for the Aged. To assure its construction,
she doggedly pursued and was approved for a $300,000 loan.
Her development of the Clara White Mission in particular
encapsulates her commitment to humanity. The Mission began in the 1880's
under the informal tutelage of Clara White and primarily consisted of a
soup kitchen to feed the needy. In 1932, during the depression years, Eartha
White recognized the need for a larger facility to feed, shelter, and counsel
the homeless. With the help of friends, she moved the mission into its
present building on Ashley Street in downtown Jacksonville. In 1944, a
fire destroyed much of the building but, with her customary resolve, Miss
White raised the funding to rebuild and even expand the original structure.
In addition to community services the mission served several other functions
during the ensuing years before her death: Works Progress Administration
office, orphanage, and a home for unwed mothers.
Indeed the heartbeat of the Mission, she lived on its
second floor until her later years. Many notable figures, such as James
Weldon Johnson, Booker T. Washington, Mary McCleod Bethune and Eleanor
Roosevelt visited her at the Mission. Interestingly enough, the Clara White
Mission, in addition to its many other social and civic services, is still
noted for being the only non-profit organization serving daily mid-day
meals to the needy in Jacksonville.
Aptly nicknamed the "Angel of Mercy", friends recall her
countless acts of charity. She was often called to aid traveling families
who had broken down on Jacksonville roads. Her work with Duval County Stockade
inmates was legendary: for more than forty years, she visited them in jail,
arranged for religious and social activities, and provided counseling and
other personal services for them. During World War I and II, her many patriotic
activities included intensive work with the Red Cross to aid both soldiers
and their families. Showing her less serious if not downright athletic
side, the ubiquitous Miss White organized a baseball team during World
War II to entertain troops at Camp Blanding.
All these activities left little time for a private life.
By her own words, "I never married. I was too busy - What man would
put up with me running around the way I do?" According to Charles E.
Bennett, author of Twelve On The River St. Johns, she was briefly
engaged, at age 20, to James Jordan, a railroad employee from South Carolina.
Letters from the collection attest to their love for each other but, unfortunately,
he tragically died a month before their impending marriage in June 1896.
As to be expected, awards and honors were numerous towards
the end of her life. In 1970, at the age of ninety-four, she received national
recognition by being named the recipient of the 1970 Lane Bryant Award
for Volunteer Service. Not stopping there, in 1971, the indefatigable Miss
White was appointed to the President's National Center for Voluntary Action.
After a reception at the White House with President Nixon, she quite characteristically
responded to the question of how she would spend the cash award, " I've
already decided I want it to serve humanity. What would I do with it? Sit around the Plaza Hotel? I'm too busy."
Eartha White died of heart failure at age ninety-seven on January 18, 1974.
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Eartha White age 30

Postcard depicting Old Folks Home (1902)

Camp Blanding baseball team. Eartha White standing on left.

Eartha M. M. White 1950

Souvenir program:
75th diamond birthday observance of Eartha White, 1951

Eartha
White standing outside Clara White Mission

Eartha White presiding over meeting at Mission

Eartha White holding two twin infants up for adoption

Eartha White age 90

Eartha White, U.S. Rep. Charles Bennett,
1965
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