Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander
- Born:
- January 2, 1898, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
- Died:
- November 1, 1989, Philadelphia (aged 91)
Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander (born January 2, 1898, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died November 1, 1989, Philadelphia) was an economist and attorney who was one of the first African American women in the United States to earn a doctoral degree. Alexander served in the administration of Pres. Harry S. Truman as a member of the President’s Committee on Civil Rights (1946). She helped found and served as national secretary (1943) of the National Bar Association, an association chiefly composed of black attorneys.
Alexander was the youngest of three children of Aaron A. Mossell, an attorney, and his wife, Mary Tanner Mossell. Her father abandoned the family while she was still young. Her maternal grandfather was Benjamin Tucker Tanner, sometime bishop of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Philadelphia. One of her uncles was the noted painter Henry Ossawa Tanner. Another of her uncles, Nathan F. Mossell, was a physician and surgeon and the founder of Mercy Hospital (later Mercy-Douglass Hospital) in Philadelphia.
Alexander was educated in Philadelphia and at M Street High School (renamed Dunbar High School after 1916) in Washington, D.C. After graduating from Dunbar, she returned to Philadelphia to attend the University of Pennsylvania, receiving B.S. and M.A. degrees in economics in 1915 and 1918, respectively. In 1921 she earned a Ph.D. in economics from the university. Her doctoral dissertation was titled “The Standard of Living Among One Hundred Negro Migrant Families in Philadelphia.”
For a few years Alexander worked as an actuary for North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company in Durham. In 1923 she married Philadelphia attorney Raymond Pace Alexander, with whom she had four daughters, two of whom died in infancy. Alexander then attended the University of Pennsylvania Law School, specializing in estate and family law and graduating with honours in 1927. She was the first African American woman to graduate from the law school and the first admitted to the bar in Pennsylvania. She worked as an assistant solicitor for the city of Philadelphia until she formed a business partnership, the firm of Alexander & Alexander, with her husband.
The findings of the civil rights commission on which she served were made public in October 1947. They led Truman to call for a federal law outlawing lynching, and they prompted him to demand, according to Truman biographer David McCullough:
more effective statutory protection of the right to vote everywhere in the country, a law against poll taxes…the establishment of a Fair Employment Practices Commission with authority to stop discrimination by employers and labor unions…[and] an end to discrimination in interstate travel.