Mary Frances Gunner (November 9, 1894 – May 13, 1953) was an African American playwright and community leader based in Brooklyn, New York. She was also known as Francis Gunner Van Dunk.[1]
Mary Frances Gunner worked at the YWCA in Montclair, New Jersey, and after 1921[10] at the Ashland Place YWCA[11] in Brooklyn.[12] She also taught school in New York.[13] Gunner was a branch manager for the New York State Employment Service from 1938 to 1950.[14] She was active in the National Association of College Women.[15]
Her pageant play, Light of the Women (1924), presents the stories of such African-American heroines as Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, Fanny Jackson Coppin, and Phillis Wheatley. It was intended for performance by community groups and schools,[16] to teach and celebrate the achievements of African-American women.[17] It was performed in 1927 at the YWCA in Orange, New Jersey.[18]
Personal life
Mary Frances Gunner married Jerry van Dunk, also from Hillburn, in 1946.[19] She died in Brooklyn in 1953.[20]
References
^"Van Dunk, Frances Gunner". Notable Kentucky African Americans Database, University of Kentucky Libraries. Retrieved 2023-05-22.
^Sallie L. Powell, "Byron Gunner", in Gerald L. Smith, Karen Cotton McDaniel, and John A. Hardin, eds., The Kentucky African American Encyclopedia (University Press of Kentucky 2015): 219-220. ISBN9780813160665
^Howard University Yearbooks, The Mirror (1915): 39.
^Howard University, The Mirror (1915 yearbook): 39.
^Sallie L. Powell, "Mary Frances Gunner", in Gerald L. Smith, Karen Cotton McDaniel, and John A. Hardin, eds., The Kentucky African American Encyclopedia (University Press of Kentucky 2015): 220. ISBN9780813160665