Subscribe to the Providence Eye
By subscribing now you'll get the latest edition every Wednesday emailed to you.
Cheryl Jordan and Constance Jordan request the honor of your presence at the joyous dedication of the historic plaque commemorating Christiana Carteaux Bannister. Free and open to the public. Refreshments will follow.
Christiana Bannister was born in 1822 in North Kingstown, Rhode Island to African and Narragansett Native American parents. She was a descendant of enslaved Blacks who worked the plantations of South County, Rhode Island, during the eighteenth century. As a young woman, Christiana moved from Rhode Island to Boston, where she began her career as a wigmaker. She was professionally known as Madame Carteaux, a Women’s Hairdresser and Wigmaker. She was a successful business entrepreneur and self-styled “hair doctress,” generating income by hairdressing and selling her hair products.
Her first marriage to Desiline Carteaux, a clothes dealer, did not last. In 1853 Christiana and Edward Mitchell Bannister met when he applied for work as a barber in her Boston salon. He became one of the most successful Black artists because of Christiana Carteaux Bannister’s financial and emotional support. Edward attributed much of his success to Christiana for her critical eye and business sense. In Boston, the Bannisters lived and worked with Lewis Hayden and participated in the Boston Underground Railroad. The Bannister hair salons became popular meeting places for Black and white abolitionists.
During the American Civil War, Christiana Carteaux Bannister advocated for equal pay for Black soldiers. In November 1864, she organized a fair sponsored by the Boston Colored Ladies Sanitary Commission to benefit the African American regiments, the 54th, and 55th Massachusetts and the 5th Massachusetts Cavalry, who served for a year and a half without pay rather than accept less than the white soldiers were paid.
In 1869 the Bannisters moved to Providence, Rhode Island, and Christiana continued her business as a hairdresser and activist.
In Providence, she founded the Home for Aged Colored Women when she learned about the struggles of African American women who worked as domestics but were too old to work and often became homeless. The home moved from Transit St. to Dodge St. and was renamed Bannister House, Inc. She was admitted into the Home for Aged Colored Women in September 1902; Bannister reportedly lived with mental illness and was transferred to the Howard Asylum. Despite her success throughout her professional life, Christiana Carteaux Bannister died with little money in January 1903.
She was laid to rest next to her husband, who died in January 1901 during a church prayer meeting, without a grave marker. But years after her death, she began to receive more public recognition for her contributions to society and Black history. Bannister was inducted into the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame in 2003, and a bronze bust of her, based upon a portrait Edward painted, was placed in the Rhode Island State House in December 2002.
https://aaregistry.org/story/christiana-carteaux-bannister-businesswoman-and-activist-born/
Edited for length