Eleanor is a senior in the College of Arts & Sciences pursuing a degree in History, with a concentration in Political History. Her research interests lie in the histories of local political organizing, as well as the contemporary political relevance of histories, and storytelling. As a Wolf Humanities Fellow and honors thesis student, Eleanor is researching Black women-led mutual aid organizations during the 1830s in Northern "free" cities, and their role as instruments of community care for those excluded by existing systems of relief. At Penn, Eleanor is a Civic Scholar and Mayor’s Scholar, and is involved in The Daily Pennsylvanian and 34th Street Magazine. When Eleanor isn’t in the archives or writing, she enjoys fostering cats, taking photos on her Kodak, and finding new ways to eat chickpeas.
Eleanor Grauke
Wolf Humanities Center Undergraduate Fellow
2024—2025 Forum on Keywords
Eleanor Grauke
History
Washwomen, Widows, and Ward Leaders: Benevolent Societies as Instruments of Freedom by Black Women in Northern Cities, 1830-1840
The antebellum era is ripe with complex narratives of communal resilience and freedom. Yet, within the broader historiography, the experiences and agency of Black women, particularly those who were laboring and single or widowed, have been given less recognition than their wealthier and male counterparts. This thesis argues that Black women living in antebellum Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston created and joined benevolent organizations in order to establish systems of care and security amidst a precarious existence. Through their participation in mutual relief societies, these women sacrificed time and funds to protect their neighbors, sisters, friends, and family. Simultaneously, these organizations often struggled with the conflicting pressures of their communities’ needs, their own values, and the expectations placed upon them by both free Black communities and white society at large. In analyzing the missions and operations of societies such as these, the enduring significance of grassroots mutual relief in marginalized communities facing governmental neglect and systemic inequality is underscored.