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Sarah Collins Fernandis Author Photo (undated)
1media/Sarah Collins Fernandis Photo from Notable Black American Women Volume II_thumb.png2024-07-09T11:29:25-04:00Amardeep Singhc185e79df2fca428277052b90841c4aba30044e12131Sarah Collins Fernandis Author Photo from "Notable Black American Women, Volume II")plain2024-07-09T11:29:25-04:00Amardeep Singhc185e79df2fca428277052b90841c4aba30044e1
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12024-07-09T11:23:07-04:00Sarah Collins Fernandis: Author Page3Biography and Links to Poems by Sarah Collins Fernandis (1863-1951)plain2024-07-29T15:26:59-04:00
This biography was researched and written by Sarah Thompson, July 2024.
Sarah Collins Fernandis, born on March 8, 1863, in Port Deposit, Maryland, was an educator, poet, and civic leader. The daughter of Caleb Alexander Collins and Mary Jane Driver Collins, Fernandis set a goal early in life to “look up and lift up” both herself and her community. After graduating from Hampton Normal and Institue in 1882, she furthered her education at the New York School of Philanthropy in 1906.
In 1902, she married John A. Fernandis, and together, they committed to improving impoverished African American neighborhoods in the Northeast. Transitioning to more social work, Fernandis spent over forty years advocating for Black communities in Baltimore, Washington, D.C., and other East Coast cities. She lectured and wrote extensively on the plight of Black workers, especially women, and she published two volumes of poetry in 1925: Poemsand Vision. (The second of these volumes is currently not in our collection; we are working on acquiring it.)
Sarah Collins Fernandis enjoyed a long, fruitful life as a public servant and writer, passing away at the age of 88. Her dedication to social welfare earned her national recognition, including an invitation from the surgeon general to join a newly formed Women’s Advisory Council to the United States Public Health Service in Washington.
Works Cited
Honey, Maureen, editor. “Sarah Collins Fernandis (1863–1951).” Shadowed Dreams: Women’s Poetry of the Harlem Renaissance, Rutgers University Press, 2006, pp. 107–10. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1s47747.19. Accessed 2 July 2024. Smith, Jessie Carney. Notable Black American Women. United States, Gale Research, 1992.