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Minding Their Own Business
Five Female Leaders from Trinidad and Tobago PETER LANG New York Bern Frankfurt Berlin Brussels Vienna Oxford Warsaw Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Dowdy, Joanne Kilgour, author. Title: Minding their own business: five female leaders from Trinidad and Tobago / Joanne Kilgour Dowdy. Description: New York: Peter Lang, 2017. Series: Black studies and critical thinking, ISSN 1947-5985 | vol. 94 Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2017012945 | ISBN 978-1-4331-3386-2 (hardcover: alk. paper) ISBN 978-1-4331-3385-5 (paperback: alk. paper) | ISBN 978-1-4539-1853-1 (ebook pdf) ISBN 978-1-4331-4209-3 (epub) | ISBN 978-1-4331-4210-9 (mobi) Subjects: LCSH: Businesswomen—Trinidad and Tobago—Case studies. Women immigrants—Trinidad and Tobago—Case studies. Women-owned business enterprises—Case studies. Entrepreneurship—Case studies. Classification: LCC HD6054.4.T7 D69 2017 | DDC 338.092/520972983—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017012945 DOI 10.3726/978-1-4539-1853-1 Bibliographic information published by Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek. Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the “Deutsche Nationalbibliografie”; detailed bibliographic data are available on the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de/. Cover photo: Gillian de Souza (used with permission) The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council of Library Resources. © 2017 Peter Lang Publishing, Inc., New York 29 Broadway, 18th floor, New York, NY 10006 www.peterlang.com All rights reserved. Reprint or reproduction, even partially, in all forms such as microfilm, xerography, microfiche, microcard, and offset strictly prohibited. Printed in the United States of America To the women leaders I describe in this book. Thank you for allowing me to document your journey as you create success for yourselves and your communities. Contents List of Tables ix Chapter 1 The Businesswomen from Trinidad: “Hucksters and Higglers” 1 Chapter 2 Maria’s Mountain 23 Chapter 3 Gee and Her Floral Arranging Life 37 Chapter 4 Gina’s Party of a Lifetime 59 Chapter 5 Nadine’s Publishing Pyramid 75 Chapter 6 Fona’s Community Book Club 93 Chapter 7 Business Is as Business Does 111 Index 135 Tables Table 1. The Five Businesswomen and Their Family Trees 9 Table 2. Support System for Each Businesswoman 14 Chapter 1 The Businesswomen from Trinidad “Hucksters and Higglers” It is certain that, both by inheritance and by purchase with their independent earnings, many women owned property in their own right, although they were unable to vote on the basis of their property. (Craig-James, 2010) During my first year living in Ohio, I decided to visit a longtime friend at her home in another state and begin documenting her journey as an independent business owner. My friend, Gina for our purposes, had just left her job where she was earning a “six figure salary” and decided to open her own catering business. I wanted to document her experience as an independent businesswoman since it seemed to me that she was off on an adventure that would be exciting, educational, and possibly a path to many other decisions that she might not be able to imagine at this early stage of her venture. This was an opportunity to be educated by someone who was experiencing hands-on learning, and I wanted to be right at her side as she created her vision and lived the reality of her choices. Then, in 2003 I decided to visit my oldest aunt in Jamaica. My inten- tion was simply to spend two weeks in a leisurely fashion, sitting on 2 minding their own business her back porch, chatting about family and visiting with her friends. In a few days after my arrival, however, I was caught up in a whirlwind of activity that involved her floral arranging and gift basket business. Gee, the name I gave her for my research project, had given me notice that Christmas was a busy season for her small business, run from her home, and that all hands were expected to contribute to the wrapping of gift baskets and delivering of floral arrangements to her customers. It didn’t take much for me to “wash my foot and jump in” as our family always said when people were expected to participate without much preamble in events. In other words, we were taught to go with the flow. What surprised me about this somewhat unexpected turn of events, though, was that my aunt explained that she was actually winding down her business and that the number of customers who were getting her attention during that holiday month were actually a small group of friends and long-time associates. Immediately, I began asking questions about the history of her business and the background that prepared her to carry on such a brisk trade in flowers. Her answers, doled out between cutting flowers, pre- paring them for baskets of different sizes and shapes, answering calls from last minute clients who needed gifts to send to various friends, and checking her list of addresses for deliveries, led me to believe that I was in the middle of some serious data gathering. Why waste the opportunity to learn about a black woman’s business history when I had a willing participant in front of me? How could a woman who was an immigrant in this country develop and sustain her own business over twenty years? What could I ask of the friends and associates who had been using this florist for several years, and did not intend to let her retire when she felt the need to take a long rest from the demands of her trade? At some time in the early years of my life in Trinidad I found out that my great grandmother, Mrs. Tee is the name that I use in this study, once ran her own business. As a child, I remembered seeing her garden and always noted that she had the most beautiful flowers in her space. Her blooms including tube roses, croten, and the anthurium lilies were some of my favorites. Many years later after my grandmother died the businesswomen from trinidad 3 I found out that her mother, Mrs. Tee, ran a floral business and those tube roses that grew at the side of the front gate to the house were used to make bridal bouquets. In retrospect, it should not have surprised me that my aunt, a descendant of Mrs. Tee, had an interest in flowers. In fact, I was soon to discover that my aunt Gee had more than an “inter- est” in flowers. She was passionate about the “art of floral arranging” as she explained, and she was able to parlay this burning desire into a service for people who appreciated quality designs using fresh flowers. Over the course of the following three years I was to learn about her evolution in this path with flowers and service to people, and to rear- range my understanding of her. Until this visit to her home in Jamaica I had always thought of her as a retired secretary. Before I left my aunt’s home in Jamaica, I was introduced to sev- eral of the women who made up her business circle. It was fortunate that I was able to reconnect with a former high school friend, Maria is the name I give her in this story, now living on the island, and who was also running her own business. We arranged to meet during my vacation and after our first visit I was able to convince her that she had a story to tell that would benefit those who learned about her. Maria, too, had moved to a country where she had no family or business con- nections, and started her own public relations firm. We recorded an interview about her history as a business owner while sitting in her car one day. This occasion was another eye-opening adventure because I had formerly thought of my old friend from Trinidad as a journalist. Her transition into public relations was of interest to me, particularly because she was now known as one of the premier providers of public relations services to some of the top firms in her new country. My interest in black, female business owners who were immigrants and prospering in their new homes overseas continued to lead me to other friends who were managing their own companies. One entre- preneur was running a bookstore in the neighborhood where I lived and she also happened to be originally from Trinidad and recently migrated to the state where we lived. Another businesswoman who was writing and selling books from her home came into my life when we both attended a presentation by a Trinidadian poet in the fifth state 4 minding their own business where I lived and worked as an academic. Nadine, as I called her in my research, and I had not seen each other since we left high school in Trinidad. As the owner of a small publishing house in the Midwest, Nadine later worked with me on a book and following that experience I decided to document her story as a businesswoman. Her need to see her own stories in print was the driving force behind her decision to learn how to publish and promote her books so that other Caribbean people might enjoy the work that she produced. Black Women in Business Since Slavery Susan Craig-James (2010) states that due to the “severely high death” rates among black men working on sugar plantations, by 1838 the majority of plantation and domestic workers were women in Tobago. In Trinidad, the sister island, the women were involved in a form of resistance to the brutal system of forced labor that was particularly harsh: poisoning (Reddock, 1994). Tobago was soon to be annexed to Trinidad and in the ensuing years a great deal of trade was carried on between the two countries. The level of independence gained by the former slaves during the transition to full emancipation was achieved, among other avenues, through the development of provision grounds and markets where the newly emancipated citizens sold their goods (Macmillan cited in Reddock, 1994). There is much evidence to assert the belief that slaves could run their own businesses, provide food for the population on the estate where they lived, create a monopoly for their goods, and make a profit from sales to their master. Donald Wood (1968) tells the story of Trinidad’s transition from slavery and the impact of immigrants on the evolution of the country. We get closer to the newly freed black women and their efforts to be self-sufficient in Natural Rebels: A Social History of Enslaved Women in Download 0.6 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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