1. Nancy Green was an American former slave, who, as "Aunt Jemima", was one of the first African-American models hired to promote a corporate trademark.

1. Nancy Green was an American former slave, who, as "Aunt Jemima", was one of the first African-American models hired to promote a corporate trademark.
Local farmers from that area named Nancy Green raised tobacco, hay, cattle, and hogs.
Nancy Green has been variously described as a servant, nurse, nanny, housekeeper, and cook for Samuel Johnson Walker and his wife Amanda.
Nancy Green served the family's next generation, again as a nanny and a cook.
Nancy Green lived in a wood frame shack behind a grand home on Main Street in Covington, Kentucky.
Nancy Green moved with the Walkers from Kentucky to Chicago in the early 1870s, before the birth of Samuel's youngest child in 1872.
At the age of fifty-nine, Nancy Green made her debut as Aunt Jemima at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition held in Chicago, beside the "world's largest flour barrel", where she operated a pancake-cooking display, sang songs, and promoted the product.
Nancy Green appeared at fairs, festivals, flea markets, food shows, and local grocery stores.
Nancy Green refused to cross the ocean for the 1900 Paris exhibition.
Nancy Green was replaced by Agnes Moodey, deemed by the company to be "a Negress of sixty years".
In 1910, at age 76, Nancy Green was still working as a residential housekeeper according to the census.
Nancy Green lived with nieces and nephews in Chicago's Fuller Park and Grand Boulevard neighborhoods into her old age.
Nancy Green used her stature as a spokesperson to advocate against poverty and in favor of equal rights for individuals in Chicago.
Nancy Green is buried in a pauper's grave near a wall in the northeast quadrant of Chicago's Oak Woods Cemetery.