Knott Street Boxing Club

Knott Street Boxing Club

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There's no excuse because this mistake must be corrected. #sweetscience #mindset #shortsvideo #tips 02/26/2026

There's no excuse because this mistake must be corrected. #sweetscience #mindset #shortsvideo #tips Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

02/25/2026
02/21/2026
First Black Woman Banker. They Erased Her From History.

The extraordinary true story of Maggie Lena Walker (1864-1934), the first African American woman to charter a bank in United States history. Born to a formerly enslaved mother in Richmond, Virginia, Walker opened St. Luke Penny Savings Bank in 1903 with over $9,000 in deposits and served as president for 30 years—safely guiding it through the Great Depression. But banking was just the beginning. In 1902, she founded The St. Luke Herald newspaper. In 1905, she opened St. Luke Emporium, a department store on Richmond's main shopping street that featured only Black mannequins and employed Black women as clerks and managers. Through the Independent Order of Saint Luke, she taught 50,000 members financial literacy, homeownership, and economic empowerment during Jim Crow. Her philosophy: community advancement over individual success. She proved Black economic independence was possible when Wall Street was redlining and banks were discriminating. Yet most Americans have never heard her name. Her Richmond home is now a National Historic Site, but her legacy of building Black financial institutions remains largely unknown. This is the story they don't teach.

#MaggieLenaWalker #BlackHistory #FirstBlackWomanBanker #StLukePennySavingsBank #Richmond #Virginia #JacksonWard #BlackBanking #EconomicEmpowerment #BlackExcellence #FinancialLiteracy #Entrepreneurship #BlackWomen #HiddenHistory #UntoldStories #BlackBusiness #CivilRights #JimCrow #WomensHistory #Banking #BlackWealth #BuildingLegacy #1903 #ProgressiveEra #NationalHistoricSite
Keywords (no #):
Independent Order of Saint Luke, St Luke Herald newspaper, St Luke Emporium department store, Charles Thaddeus Russell architect, Elizabeth Van Lew, formerly enslaved parents, Jackson Ward district, Right Worthy Grand Secretary, mutual aid society, Black mannequins, financial institutions, redlining, Great Depression survival, NAACP, National Association of Colored Women, home ownership, economic independence, community banking 10/19/2025

First Black Woman Banker. They Erased Her From History. The extraordinary true story of Maggie Lena Walker (1864-1934), the first African American woman to charter a bank in United States history. Born to a formerly enslaved mother in Richmond, Virginia, Walker opened St. Luke Penny Savings Bank in 1903 with over $9,000 in deposits and served as president for 30 years—safely guiding it through the Great Depression. But banking was just the beginning. In 1902, she founded The St. Luke Herald newspaper. In 1905, she opened St. Luke Emporium, a department store on Richmond's main shopping street that featured only Black mannequins and employed Black women as clerks and managers. Through the Independent Order of Saint Luke, she taught 50,000 members financial literacy, homeownership, and economic empowerment during Jim Crow. Her philosophy: community advancement over individual success. She proved Black economic independence was possible when Wall Street was redlining and banks were discriminating. Yet most Americans have never heard her name. Her Richmond home is now a National Historic Site, but her legacy of building Black financial institutions remains largely unknown. This is the story they don't teach. #MaggieLenaWalker #BlackHistory #FirstBlackWomanBanker #StLukePennySavingsBank #Richmond #Virginia #JacksonWard #BlackBanking #EconomicEmpowerment #BlackExcellence #FinancialLiteracy #Entrepreneurship #BlackWomen #HiddenHistory #UntoldStories #BlackBusiness #CivilRights #JimCrow #WomensHistory #Banking #BlackWealth #BuildingLegacy #1903 #ProgressiveEra #NationalHistoricSite Keywords (no #): Independent Order of Saint Luke, St Luke Herald newspaper, St Luke Emporium department store, Charles Thaddeus Russell architect, Elizabeth Van Lew, formerly enslaved parents, Jackson Ward district, Right Worthy Grand Secretary, mutual aid society, Black mannequins, financial institutions, redlining, Great Depression survival, NAACP, National Association of Colored Women, home ownership, economic independence, community banking

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77 NE Knott Street
Portland, OR
97212

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Wednesday 5pm - 7pm
Thursday 5pm - 7pm
Friday 5am - 7pm
Saturday 12pm - 2pm