Theresa Merritt donates Madam C.J. Walker doll to NAPAC Museum

Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
(Jul 13, 2023 | 12:23 p.m.)

Roscoe Barnes III

Natchez doll artisan Theresa Merritt recently donated a
Madam C.J. Walker doll to the Natchez Museum of African American History and
Culture. The doll will be featured in the upcoming exhibit at the museum
titled, “Accenting the Natchez Black Business District.” The exhibit will open
Sept. 30. Merritt is pictured here with Bobby Dennis, the museum’s executive
director.


NATCHEZ, Miss. – A Madam C.J. Walker doll created by
Theresa Merritt of Natchez will be the highlight of a permanent exhibit at the
Natchez Museum of African American History and Culture, which is commonly
called NAPAC museum. Walker, who visited Natchez in 1916, was one of the first
American women to become a self-made millionaire.

The NAPAC exhibit is titled, “Accenting the Natchez Black
Business District.” It will open as a free public event on Sept. 30 at 301 Main
St.

According to Bobby Dennis, the museum’s executive
director, the exhibit will tell the story of Walker, an African American
entrepreneur and philanthropist, and St. Catherine Street, where many
businesses once thrived in the black community.

“A lot of people are not getting the full story of
Natchez,” Dennis said. “How many people in Natchez know that the first black
female millionaire in our nation had a relationship with local residents?”

Merritt donated the Walker doll to the museum on
Saturday, July 8. Merritt is a doll artisan who has created dolls for over 30
years. She said her niche is creating African American dolls. Her dolls have
depicted Harriet Tubman, Elizabeth Hobbs Keckley, and Phillis Wheatley, among
other figures in African American history.

Theresa Merritt, a Natchez artisan, gazes at the Madam
C.J. Walker doll she created and recently donated to the Natchez Museum of
African American History and Culture. The doll will be featured in the upcoming
exhibit at the museum titled, “Accenting the Natchez Black Business District.”
The exhibit will open Sept. 30.

‘Lady with a Past’

“All my dolls are inspired by the past,” Merritt wrote on
her webpage. “I have always been fascinated with history, especially the
stories I have found about the strong women, famous or not, who helped shape
history in their own way.”

Merritt said she created Walker’s doll over the last few
months, after watching the Netflix miniseries, “Self Made: Inspired by the
Life of Madam C.J. Walker” that featured Octavia Spencer.

“I had read about her, and I watched the miniseries on
Netflix and became fascinated by her story,” Merritt said. “It made me sad that
I had not heard of her before that. She was monumental for women’s rights,
especially black women’s rights.”

Merritt said Walker’s story should have been taught in
schools. “She was a tremendous example for young women of any walk of life,”
Merritt said.

As for donating it to the museum, Merritt said this was
something she had thought about for years. “I had visited the museum one time
and was so impressed by what I saw,” she said. “I thought it would be a nice
gesture to give them something, a lady who had ties to Natchez. I was also
inspired by the enthusiasm by Bobby Dennis.”

Merritt said Walker used to travel to different cities to
market her cosmetics and beauty products, and she came to Natchez for that
reason.

Walker and the Dumas brothers

Walker was an acquaintance of the Dumas brothers: Dr.
Albert Dumas Sr., a physician, and Dr. Henry Joseph Dumas, a pharmacist, who
managed Dumas Pharmacy at 707-09 Franklin St. When Walker visited Natchez in
1916, she stayed at Dr. Albert’s home at 729 N. Pine St., which is now 729
M.L.K. Jr. Road, according to Dr. Albert’s grandson, Joseph Dumas.

The two brothers apparently made a great impression on
Walker. So much so that she raved about them in a letter to her attorney, F. B.
Ransom. In the letter, which was dated, Nov. 8, 1916, Walker wrote:

“I surely made a hit in Natchez and am sure we’ll get
some good business from there. Write a nice letter to Drs. Henry and Albert
Dumas [who] vied with each other in showing us every courtesy [and who] not
only refused to take pay for our room and board, but carriage hire, medicine,
professional services and even advertising. I never have met such people before
in all my life to be strangers. I’d like so much for you to know them.”

This letter was shared online by Walker’s
great-great-granddaughter, A’Lelia Bundles, in the article, “Madam Walker and
The Doctors Dumas of Natchez.” Bundles is a journalist and the author of “On
Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam C. J. Walker” (Scribner,
2001).

Bundle noted the Dumas brothers were unusually
successful, not only in Natchez, but as far away as Howard University’s School
of Medicine, where the brother, Dr. Michel O. Dumas, served as the school’s
chairman of the board.

“At this point, I’ve spent so many years doing research
on African American success stories that I’m no longer surprised by the
existence of people like the Dumas Brothers, which is not to say that I don’t
also still stand in awe of their accomplishments,” Bundles wrote. “The Doctors
Dumas may have been the exception to the rule a century ago, but the
intelligence, motivation and hunger that spurred them on was in rich
supply among black men and women born during the generations immediately
after the Emancipation Proclamation.”

Walker died on May 25, 1919, after succumbing to kidney
failure reportedly brought on by high blood pressure. She was 51.

For more information on NAPAC museum’s exhibit, contact
Bobby Dennis at 
(601)
445-0728
, or by email at [email protected]

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