TY - BOOK AU - Shirley Stewart PY - 2013 CY - New York, United States of America PB - Peter Lang Verlag SN - 1947-5985 SN - 9781453912720 TI - The World of Stephanie St. Clair T2 - An Entrepreneur, Race Woman and Outlaw in Early Twentieth Century Harlem DO - 10.3726/978-1-4539-1272-0 UR - https://www.peterlang.com/document/1051422 N2 - Born in Guadeloupe in 1897, Stephanie St. Clair entered the United States thirteen years later. By 1923 at the age of twenty-six she would create and manage a highly lucrative policy bank in Harlem – earning a quarter of a million dollars a year. To this day, she remains the only black female gangster to run an operation of that size. Infamous gangster Dutch Schultz invited himself to share in the Harlem profits. Unlike other Harlem bankers, St. Clair resisted. Despite Schultz’s threats, many of her male employees remained with her. Some said she paid them high wages and challenged them by asking, «What kind of men would desert a lady in a fight?» Upon arrival in the United States St. Clair did not conduct her life in the manner expected of a black female Caribbean immigrant in the early twentieth century. What factors influenced St. Clair’s decision to become an entrepreneur and activist within her community? Why did St. Clair describe herself as a «lady» when ladies did not run illegal businesses and they were not black? These questions are explored along with her lineage – a lineage that contains the same fighting spirit that she carried throughout her life. This is not the story of a victim. Courses concerned with the study of social and economic conditions of black urban residents during the early twentieth century and female entrepreneurs of the same era will find St. Clair’s story compelling and informative. KW - bank, female gangster, immigrant, policy bank, gangster, activist LA - English ER -