- Source: Christine Moore Howell
- Geng di Amerika Serikat
- Charlie Chaplin
- Starbucks
- Academy Award untuk Film Terbaik
- Academy Award untuk Aktris Terbaik
- Daftar tokoh YouTube
- Daftar penemu planet minor
- Daftar anggota parlemen yang terpilih dalam pemilihan umum Britania Raya 2019
- Daftar ahli botani berdasarkan singkatan penulis
- Daftar tokoh Alkitab yang diidentifikasi dalam sumber di luar Alkitab
- Christine Moore Howell
- Christine Howell
- List of Princeton High School Alumni
- New Brunswick, New Jersey
- Christine Todd Whitman
- Joni Ernst
- List of 2024 United States presidential electors
- List of Bones characters
- Christine Sinclair
- List of CNN personnel
Christine Moore Howell (March 19, 1899 – December 13, 1972) was a hair care product businesswoman who founded Christine Cosmetics where she formulated her own line of cosmetics and hair care products. She was the head of the New Jersey Board of Beauty Culture Control. She was the first African-American to graduate from Princeton High School.
Biography
She was born on March 19, 1899, as Christine Moore in Princeton, New Jersey, to William Moore Sr. (1863–1920) and Adelaide Williams, both from Hillsboro, North Carolina. Her siblings were Bessie Moore, Arthur C. Moore, and William Moore Jr. Her father migrated from Hillsboro, North Carolina, to Princeton, New Jersey, where he opened a shop buying and selling used clothes and furniture to the university students. She attended Princeton High School, where she was the first African-American to graduate.
She opened a beauty shop in one of the buildings that William now owned. She studied chemistry in Paris and when she returned she formulated a line of cosmetics.
In 1924 she married Dr. Edward Gaylord Howell of Darien, Connecticut.
In 1935 Harold Giles Hoffman, the Governor of New Jersey appointed her to the newly formed New Jersey Board of Beauty Culture Control, where she became chairman.
She died on December 13, 1972, and was interred in Princeton Cemetery.
Publications
Beauty Culture and Care of the Hair (1936)
See also
Madam C. J. Walker and Marjorie Joyner of Chicago, Illinois
References
External links
Christine Moore Howell letter at the W. E. B. Du Bois archive.