Mary
A. Upperman, 1878-1937
When Mary A. Upperman
came to Akron, Ohio, in 1916, she was a minister's wife. But, with the
untimely death of her husband, Upperman assumed a new identity, as an
entrepreneur. She became perhaps the most successful African-American
businesswoman in the city during the Progressive period.
Little is known
about Upperman's early days. She was born in Raleigh, N.C., and was
orphaned by the age of 2. She attended the prestigious Scotia
Seminary, the rigorous girl's boarding school in North Carolina
that educated the likes of such African-American women leaders as Mary
McLeod Bethune, Gertrude Brown and Mary Church Terrell. After graduating
at the age of 19, Upperman taught school at Keystone, W.Va.
She and her husband,
the Rev. Louis M. Upperman, came to Akron where he became pastor of
the Wesley Temple A.M.E. Zion Church. He died in 1917. She stayed in
the city and began a new life.
According to the
city's Negro Year Book of 1927, Upperman had the one qualification
needed for success, "belief in herself." She started initially
running an employment agency out of her home. By 1920, however, Upperman
had diversified. She continued running the employment agency but also
ran a thriving grocery and laundry. By 1927, she was the sole owner
of the only African American-owned drug store in the city (Globe Drug
Store, 103 N. Main St.), even as she continued to run her grocery.
The Depression had
some effect on Upperman. In 1931, she ran a confectionary (North End
Cut Rate Store, 187 Bluff) and a grocery (189 Bluff) but she had apparently
given up her drug store. By 1932, she was concentrating on the grocery
business.
Mary A. Upperman
died of pneumonia in Akron, on Dec. 7, 1937. She was only 59 years old.
Although she carried
on lucrative businesses, Upperman always retained ties to the church
that her husband once ministered. She supervised the Sunday school for
many years. In 1936, she was a delegate to the general conference of
the A.M.E. Zion Church.
She was a member
of the board of directors of the Association for Colored Community Work
which affiliated with the National Urban League. For the last four years
of her life, she also gave domestic science classes for girls.
No known picture
exists of Mary Upperman. This advertisment from her drug store courtesy
of The University of Akron Archives.
--Kathleen
L. Endres
