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The untold story of the real ‘Aunt Jemima’ and the fight to preserve her legacy

Nancy Green (March 4, 1834 – August 30, 1923) was an American former slave, who, as “Aunt Jemima”, was one of the first African-American models hired to promote a corporate trademark. The Aunt Jemima recipe was not her recipe, but she became the advertising world’s first living trademark.

Biography

Nancy Hayes (or Hughes) was 𝐛𝐨𝐫𝐧 enslaved in the Antebellum South on March 4, 1834. Montgomery County Historical Society oral history places her 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡 at a farm on Somerset Creek, six miles outside Mount Sterling in Montgomery County, Kentucky. With George Green, she had at least two and as many as four 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥ren (one of whom was 𝐛𝐨𝐫𝐧 in 1862). Local farmers from that area named Green raised tobacco, hay, cattle, and hogs. There were no 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡 certificates or marriage licenses for enslaved people.

Nancy Green has been variously described as a servant, nurse, nanny, housekeeper, and cook for Samuel Johnson Walker and his wife Amanda. She also served the family’s next generation, again as a nanny and a cook. Walker’s two sons later became well known as Chicago Circuit Judge Charles Morehead Walker., and Dr. Samuel J. Walker.

By the end of the American Civil War, Green had already lost her husband and 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥ren. She lived in a wood frame shack (still standing as of 2014) behind a grand home on Main Street in Covington, Kentucky.   She moved with the Walkers from Kentucky to Chicago in the early 1870s, before the 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡 of Samuel’s youngest 𝘤𝘩𝘪𝘭𝘥 in 1872. The Walker family initially settled in a swank residential district near Ashland Avenue and Washington Boulevard called the “Kentucky Colony”, then home to many transplanted Kentuckians.

1894 advertisement depicting Nancy Green as Aunt Jemima

On the recommendation of Judge Walker, she was hired by the R.T. Davis Milling Company in St. Joseph, Missouri, to represent “Aunt Jemima”, an advertising character named after a song from a minstrel show. She was selected because the Milling Company wanted to portray the product as being created by a compassionate, loving, and caring mother.

At the age of fifty-nine, Green made her debut as Aunt Jemima at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition held in Chicago, beside the “world’s largest flour barrel” (twenty-four feet high), where she operated a pancake-cooking display, sang songs, and promoted the product.

After the Expo, Green was reportedly offered a lifetime contract to adopt the Aunt Jemima moniker and promote the pancake mix; however, she would only choose to serve in the position for twenty years.  This marked the beginning of a major promotional push by the company that included thousands of personal appearances and Aunt Jemima merchandising. She appeared at fairs, festivals, flea markets, food shows, and local grocery stores. Her arrival was heralded by large billboards featuring the caption, “I’s in town, honey.”

Despite her “lifetime contract”, she portrayed the role for no more than twenty years. She refused to cross the ocean for the 1900 Paris exhibition. She was replaced by Agnes Moodey, deemed by the company to be “a Negress of sixty years”. After Green’s death other women were hired by Quaker Oats to portray the role of Aunt Jemima, including Lillian Richard.

In 1910, at age 76, Green was still working as a residential housekeeper according to the census.

Few people were aware of her role as Aunt Jemima. Green lived with nieces and nephews in Chicago’s Fuller Park and Grand Boulevard neighborhoods into her old age. At the time of her death, she was living with her great-nephew and his wife.

Religion and advocacy

Green was active in the Chicago Olivet Baptist Church. During her lifetime, it grew significantly, becoming the largest African-American church in the United States, with a membership at that time of over 9,000.

Her financial freedom and stature as a national spokesperson enabled her to become a leading advocate against poverty and in favor of equal rights for the black population. She used her stature as a spokesperson to advocate against poverty and in favor of equal rights for individuals in Chicago.

Death

Green died on August 30, 1923, at the age of 89 in Chicago, when a car driven by pharmacist Dr. H. S. Seymour collided with a laundry truck and “hurtled” onto the sidewalk where she was standing.  She is buried in a pauper’s grave near a wall in the northeast quadrant of Chicago’s Oak Woods Cemetery.

Grave marker

Her grave was unmarked and unknown until 2015. Sherry Williams, founder of the Bronzeville Historical Society, spent 15 years uncovering Green’s resting place. Williams received approval to place a headstone. Williams reached out to Quaker Oats about whether they would support a monument for Green’s grave. “Their corporate response was that Nancy Green and Aunt Jemima aren’t the same – that Aunt Jemima is a fictitious character.”  The headstone was placed on September 5, 2020.

Lawsuit

In 2014, a lawsuit was filed against Quaker Oats, PepsiCo, and others, claiming that Green and Anna Short Harrington (who portrayed Aunt Jemima starting in 1935) were exploited by the company and cheated out of the monetary compensation they were promised. The plaintiffs were two of Harrington’s great-grandsons, and they sought a multi-billion dollar settlement for descendants of Green and Harrington. The lawsuit was dismissed with prejudice and without leave to amend on February 18, 2015.

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