skip to main content
Loading Events
  • This event has passed.
Shennette Garrett-Scott

Centennial Speaker Series: Shennette Garrett-Scott on Banking on Freedom: Black Women in U.S. Finance Before the New Deal

Wednesday, October 14, 2020
12 – 1 p.m.

Join us for a talk with award-winning author and professor Shennette Garrett-Scott on her book Banking on Freedom: Black Women in U.S. Finance Before the New Deal. African American women in 1920s-era Harlem participated in real estate and other investment schemes for complex reasons. They often hoped to combine individual gain and collective uplift in their financial pursuits. The St. Luke Finance Corporation was one such scheme that showed great promise but struggled against structural and institutional inequities, as well as criticism from some sectors of the Black community.

Agenda
12 p.m.: Welcome Remarks: Donna Rapaccioli, dean of the Gabelli School of Business

12:05 p.m.: Speaker Introduction: David Cowen, president/CEO of the Museum of American Finance

12:08 p.m.: Discussion: Shennette Garrett-Scott

12:45 p.m.: Audience Q&A

1 p.m.: Closing Remarks: David Cowen

About the Speaker
Garrett-Scott is committed to recovering and telling little-known stories about African American enterprise. A native Texan, she is an award-winning author and professor whose research focuses on race, gender, and capitalism. She is an associate professor of history and African American studies at the University of Mississippi. Her first book, Banking on Freedom (Columbia University Press, 2019), was shortlisted for the 2020 Hagley Prize for the best book in business history, and it won two awards for the best book in Black women’s history from the Association of Black Women Historians and the Organization of American Historians. She has written pieces about Black business, entrepreneurs, and other topics for academic journals, popular magazines, and online blogs. She is featured in the PBS documentary Boss: The Black Experience in Business and a documentary series about women’s suffrage for Mississippi Public Broadcasting. Her public history work includes helping develop the Ida B. Wells Commemorative Tour, a racial reconciliation heritage tour in Holly Springs, Mississippi, Wells’s birthplace and home until the early 1880s. Her article, “‘A Commercial Emancipation’ for the Negro,” appeared in the Summer 2019 issue of Financial History magazine.

This event is co-sponsored with the CFA Society New York, the Gabelli Center for Global Security Analysis, and the Museum of American Finance.

Register

This event is open to alumni, faculty/staff, parents, students, and the public.