Madam C J Walker

The first female self-made millionairess, in the United States

She was able to make her fortune by producing a line of hair care products specifically designed for Black women. Walker was motivated to create special hair products after she experienced scalp problems. This led her to the creation of a program for hair care she called the “Walker System.”The Guinness Book of World Records also recognizes her as “the first woman to earn a personal fortune of more than $1 million.”

Walker was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1993. In 1998, the U.S. Postal Service issued a Madam Walker commemorative stamp as part of its Black Heritage Series. In 2022, Mattel issued a Madam C.J. Walker Barbie doll as part of their Inspiring Women doll collection.The Madam C. J. Walker Business and Community Recognition Awards are sponsored by the National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Oakland / Bay Area chapter. An annual luncheon honors Walker and awards outstanding women in the community with scholarships. Spirit Awards have sponsored the Madame Walker Theatre Center in Indianapolis. Established as a tribute to Walker, the annual award has honored national leaders in entrepreneurship, philanthropy, civic engagement, and the arts since 2006. Awards presented to individuals include the Madame C. J. Walker Heritage Award as well as young entrepreneur and legacy prizes.


Successful Entrepreneur, Philanthropist, and Social Activist

Few historical figures of the latter part of the 19th century fit the profile of inventor, entrepreneur, and philanthropist like Madam C.J. Walker. Having endured a difficult childhood, being female, African American, with virtually no formal education and with no family inheritance or outside resources to rely on, she overcame a series of formidable obstacles to become one of the wealthiest, most successful women in the United States in the early 1900s. She is considered a revolutionary in the area of personal hygiene and grooming for the nation’s black women, having begun an initiative to educate and give them tools to stay healthy and look their best, in particular, via her creation of the Walker Hair Care System.

Born by the name of Sarah Breedlove in Delta, Louisiana, on December 23, 1867, she was the second youngest of six children born to Owen and Minerva Anderson Breedlove, who had been slaves on the Burney plantation there. She was the first of their children to be born after slavery was officially declared dead, with the end of the Civil War in 1865.

By the time she was eight years old, both of Walker’s parents had passed away. She moved to Mississippi, married at 14 and gave birth to a daughter at age 17. Her husband died in 1887.

That year she and their three-year-old daughter, Lelia (who later would be known as A’Lelia Walker), moved from Vicksburg, Mississippi, to St. Louis where her three older brothers were barbers. Having little formal education, she worked as a laundress, making as little as $1.50 a week.

The young widow joined St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church where she was mentored by the women of the congregation. As a member of the choir and the women’s missionary society, she was exposed to educated, accomplished teachers and civic leaders, many of whom belonged to the National Association of Colored Women.

It was in St. Louis that Walker thought of putting together the ingredients for a solution that would treat a then-common scalp disease, using massage, frequent shampooing, and an ointment or pomade containing therapeutic sulfur. The system also employed hot combs, though she did not invent this tool, despite its having been credited to her in the past. It was said that she herself had begun losing her hair, and claimed to have come up with her medicinal idea in a dream. She is also, however, said to have worked with some of the solutions made by another enterprising black woman, Annie Malone, who had begun her own beauty products business.

Determined to start a successful business of her own, she moved to Denver, Colorado, in 1905 where she married Charles Joseph Walker. She changed her name and began promoting her products throughout the South under the name Madam C.J. Walker. She worked tirelessly, traveling extensively and showing black women how to treat and care for their hair, selling “Madam Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower” at first, and later, a variety of cosmetics and hair care products. She hired numerous sales persons, or what she called “hair culturists,” to go door to door and make house calls.

The Walker system had a straightening effect that was very appealing for many black and some white women, and was much more healthy and effective than the popular method of using a hot iron to achieve this look. Before long her business grew to the point where she needed a second office. She launched it in Pittsburgh in 1908. She also began training staff in her own “Walker Schools.”

In 1910, Walker consolidated her operations to a new headquarters in Indianapolis, Indiana. There she built the main plant for the Walker Manufacturing Company. She continued to add to her sales force, employing anywhere from 2,000 to 10,000 or more “Walker agents” in the U.S. and the Caribbean, providing lucrative work for black women who might have otherwise only been able to find menial work as maids or cooks.

Not afraid to defy stereotypes or to take chances, Walker’s business continued to grow until she had a payroll that topped $200,000 per year. She became a very rich, self-made woman, rare for a woman at all at the time, even rarer still for a black woman. She was generous with her fortune, donating a great deal of money to charity and to schools, including the YMCA and the NAACP.

In 1916, Walker moved to New York where she built a mansion, Villa Lewaro, at Irvington-on-the Hudson. She died there on May 25, 1919 at the age of 51 from kidney failure. At the time of her death, her estate was worth the equivalent of nearly $7 million in today’s dollars.

Madam Walker and Booker T. Washington at YMCA Opening
Credit: Madam C.J. Walker Collection, Indiana Historical Society

Madam Walker built the Madam C. J. Walker Manufacturing Company and opened a salon and training center that provided education and career opportunities to countless African-American women. A staunch believer in the value of education, she supported scholarships at schools across the country. As a social activist, Madam Walker organized her sales agents into local and national clubs so that they could perform local charity in response to community needs.

Her business continued to thrive for several decades: When the popular Parisian black entertainer Josephine Baker began using Walker’s hair-straightening system in the 1920s, business got even more of a boost, especially overseas. The Madam C.J. Walker Manufacturing Company headquarters in Indianapolis functioned until 1985, when the company sold its product rights and closed its doors for good. The original building is now a national historic landmark known as Madam Walker Theatre Center.

Madam C.J. Walker was posthumously awarded the IUPUI Chancellor’s Medallion during the IUPUI Commencement Ceremony on May 12, 2018.

Walker has been posthumously inducted into the National Business Hall of Fame at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago and the National Women’s Hall of Fame, and in 1998 she was honored with a U. S. postage stamp as part of the Black Heritage Series. Her trailblazing life has been detailed in a book written by her great-great-granddaughter, A’Lelia Bundles, called “On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam C.J. Walker.

As a Businesswoman Madam C. J. Walker is celebrated for the strides she was able to make at a time when it was very difficult for Black individuals to succeed.