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Our American Stories

Madam C.J. Walker: America’s First Self-Made Female Millionaire

Our American Stories

iHeartPodcasts

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.6817 Ratings

🗓️ 17 March 2026

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On this episode of Our American Stories, born on the land of the former plantation where her parents had been enslaved, Madam C. J. Walker married young, became a mother young, was widowed young, and divorced young. Out of necessity, she went on to create a revolutionary hair care product that transformed her life and helped make her one of the first self-made female millionaires in American history.

A'lelia Bundles, Walker’s great-great-great-granddaughter and author of On Her Own Ground, shares the remarkable story of entrepreneurship, resilience, and legacy behind one of the most influential businesswomen in American history.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.5

Guaranteed human.

0:14.3

And we continue with our American stories.

0:17.8

Up next we have the story of Madam C.J. Walker.

0:22.6

Many believe that she was the first female, self-made millionaire, and she just happens to be African American. She was also the first

0:29.0

person to bring hair care products to the masses. Here to tell her story is her great, great

0:34.0

granddaughter, an author of the book, On Her Own Ground, The Life and Times of

0:39.3

Madam C.J. Walker. Here's Aalelia Bundles. She started life as Sarah Breed Love on the same

0:51.0

plantation in Delta, Louisiana, where her parents had been enslaved.

0:56.2

And she was the first child in her family born free in December of 1867.

1:02.4

They lived in an area that had been devastated by the Civil War.

1:07.2

Everything, the plantations had been burned down.

1:09.9

And now the formerly enslaved people were

1:11.8

struggling to just live a life. And they had very little money at the end of every season. They owed

1:17.9

money to the plantation owners who had been their former slave owners. And Sarah Breed Love as the

1:25.1

young child in her family, she had had very little formal education.

1:30.8

There were schools for black children in Louisiana, even though her family minister, Curtis

1:37.7

Pollard had been a black state senator during reconstruction when African Americans had gained

1:43.2

a great deal of political power,

1:44.7

that power was taken away from them by the Ku Klux Klan,

1:48.1

so that by the time Sarah was old enough to go to school, there were no schools for black

1:52.2

children.

...

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