Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander
Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander (1898-1989) was a Philadelphia lawyer and civil rights activist who became the first African American woman to earn a Ph.D. in economics in the United States and the first African American woman to earn a law degree and practice law in Pennsylvania. Her achievements shattered barriers that racism and sexism combined to maintain, while her subsequent career—decades of civil rights work, government service, and legal practice—demonstrated that her pioneering credentials were not merely symbolic but foundation for sustained contribution. Alexander's Philadelphia career represented what Black women could achieve when extraordinary ability met opportunities that discrimination usually foreclosed.[1]
Education and Achievement
[edit | edit source]Sadie Tanner Mossell was born on January 2, 1898, in Philadelphia, into a prominent African American family—her father Aaron Albert Mossell was the first African American to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, her uncle Nathan Francis Mossell founded the Frederick Douglass Memorial Hospital. This lineage of professional achievement created expectations that she would meet and exceed. Her education at the University of Pennsylvania, where she earned her bachelor's degree (1918), her master's degree in economics (1919), and her doctorate in economics (1921), established the academic credentials that racism would nonetheless devalue.[2]
Her inability to secure employment as an economist, despite credentials that would have opened any door for a white male, demonstrated that achievement alone could not overcome discrimination. Her decision to pursue law at Penn, from which she graduated in 1927, sought credentials more difficult for racist employers to ignore. Her marriage to Raymond Pace Alexander, also a Penn Law graduate who would become the city's first Black judge, created a partnership that combined legal practice with civil rights advocacy.[1]
Her practice, first with her husband and later independently, addressed the legal problems of Black Philadelphia while her civil rights work extended her influence beyond individual clients. Her appointment by President Truman to the Committee on Civil Rights in 1947, which produced the landmark report "To Secure These Rights," demonstrated that her prominence extended to national significance. Her continued activism throughout her long life maintained engagement that her credentials had enabled.[2]
Civil Rights Work
[edit | edit source]Alexander's civil rights advocacy addressed the discrimination that her own achievements could not escape. Her work with the Philadelphia Commission on Human Relations, which she chaired during the 1960s, provided institutional platform for addressing the employment, housing, and public accommodation discrimination that Philadelphia's Black residents faced. Her legal expertise, deployed in service of civil rights causes, combined professional skill with moral commitment.[1]
Her challenges to segregation in Philadelphia's institutions—hotels, restaurants, theaters—demonstrated that the city's liberal reputation concealed discrimination that sustained effort was required to address. Her persistence, maintained across decades when progress was slow and opposition sustained, showed determination that setbacks could not diminish. The honors she eventually received—the Presidential Medal of Freedom would not come until 1989, months before her death—acknowledged achievement that contemporaries had not adequately recognized.[2]
Her mentorship of younger lawyers, her example for women and African Americans considering legal careers, and her institutional leadership all extended influence beyond her individual practice. The barriers she had broken, while not eliminating the obstacles others would face, demonstrated that such obstacles could be overcome. Her lifetime of work provided model for combining professional excellence with social commitment.[1]
Legacy
[edit | edit source]Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander died on November 1, 1989, her ninety-one years having witnessed both the achievement of her pioneering credentials and the ongoing struggle that their necessity revealed. Her academic firsts—the first Black woman with an economics doctorate, the first to practice law in Pennsylvania—mark achievements that should not have been remarkable but that racism made historically significant. Her Philadelphia career, rooted in family traditions of professional achievement and community service, demonstrated what the city could nurture when opportunity met ability. Alexander represents what Black women could achieve against obstacles that her success helped diminish but did not eliminate.[2]