
As Women’s History Month shines a light on trailblazers whose impact changed the nation, Septima Poinsette Clark stands out as one of the most influential (and often overlooked) figures of the Civil Rights Movement.
Known as the ‘Queen Mother’ or ‘Grandmother’ of the Civil Rights Movement, Clark helped build the foundation for Black political power in the South not through marches or speeches alone, but through education. Her belief was simple and powerful: knowledge could give people the tools to challenge injustice in ways that laws alone could not.
Born in Charleston, South Carolina, on May 3, 1898, Clark came of age in the deeply segregated South. Her early life was shaped by the realities of racial inequality and class divisions. She saw firsthand the barriers Black families faced, and those experiences would later shape her lifelong commitment to education and civil rights.
Clark’s own education began in an under-resourced school where, she later recalled, little real learning took place. Her mother quickly removed her and arranged for her to be taught by a woman in the neighborhood. That early lesson, that education could be both denied and reclaimed, stayed with her.
After graduating from high school in 1916, Clark could not immediately afford college. Instead, she passed a teaching exam and began working in rural schools, including on Johns Island, one of South Carolina’s Sea Islands. There she saw striking inequalities between Black and White schools, from classroom conditions to teacher salaries.
Those injustices pushed her toward activism. Clark joined the NAACP and became involved in efforts to improve education for Black teachers and students. In Charleston, she helped organize a successful petition drive that led to Black teachers being hired in the city’s public schools. Later, she also worked in the broader struggle for equal pay for Black educators.
But Clark’s greatest contribution would come through her work in adult literacy and citizenship education.
While teaching during the day, Clark spent her evenings helping adults learn to read and write. She developed practical teaching methods that used everyday materials, including catalogs and forms people encountered in daily life. Over time, she realized that literacy was not just about reading. It was about access, dignity, and power.
That idea became central to the Citizenship Schools she helped create and expand through the Highlander Folk School in Tennessee and later through the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.
The schools were designed to help Black adults pass literacy tests that Southern states used to block them from registering to vote. But the classes did much more than prepare people for voter registration. They taught students how to fill out forms, sign checks, understand their rights, and see themselves as active participants in democracy.
Clark and her cousin Bernice Robinson trained ordinary people (many of whom had themselves learned to read as adults) to become teachers in their own communities. This model created not only new voters, but also new local leaders.
By Clark’s estimate, the Citizenship Schools reached more than 25,000 people directly, while helping lay the groundwork for hundreds of thousands of new Black voters across the South. Before 1969, roughly 700,000 African Americans became registered voters through efforts tied to the movement she helped shape.
Her influence extended into the highest levels of the Civil Rights Movement. Martin Luther King, Jr. reportedly called her the “Mother of the Movement,” and she became the first woman to serve on the executive board of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Even there, she faced resistance from male leaders who struggled to accept women in top leadership roles.
Clark also paid a personal price for her activism. In 1956, after South Carolina banned public employees from belonging to civil rights organizations, she refused to leave the NAACP and was fired from her teaching job, losing her pension after four decades of service. Still, she did not stop.
She continued organizing, teaching, and building community power until her retirement from active work with the SCLC in 1970. Later, she won reinstatement of the pension and salary she had lost and went on to serve on the Charleston County School Board.
Clark died on December 15, 1987, but her legacy lives on in schools, parks, roadways, and even a South Carolina commemorative coin bearing her image.
More importantly, her legacy lives in the generations of Black citizens who gained the confidence, knowledge, and political voice to claim their rights.
Septima Clark may not always be the first name mentioned in Civil Rights Movement history, but she helped teach a movement how to stand, speak, and vote. That makes her not only worthy of remembrance during Women’s History Month, but essential to the story of American democracy.






