Rare Black History Facts – Day 4

Feb 04, 2016 by admin - 0 Comments

Who is Sarah Rector?

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Sarah Rector became an Oil Baroness, at the early age of 10.
In September, 1913, The Kansas City Star reported: “Millions to a Negro Girl – Sarah Rector, 10-Year Old, Has Income of $300 A Day From Oil,” and The Savannah Tribune ran: “Oil Well Produces Neat Income – Negro Girl’s $112,000 A Year.”

In 1914 and 1915, the Salt Lake Telegram, The Oregonian and American Magazine profiled the “bewildered little ten year-old girl” and told of how she inherited her “big income” but still wore tattered dresses and slept each night in a big armchair beside her six siblings in a two-room prairie house in Muskogee, Oklahoma. By the early 1920s, many newspapers covered the court battles involving white men seeking to become Rector’s guardian to gain control over her estate.

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She was one of a group of Creek freedman children who were given land allotments by the U.S. government as part of the Treaty of 1866. Sarah Rector will forever be a proud part of our African American history.

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