Georgia Black

Georgia Black ( Cantey; 1906–June 1951), was an African American transgender woman who ran away from her home and lived as a woman from age 15 to her death. She was a respected member of the Sanford, Florida community, and remained so even as her status as someone assigned male at birth was leaked to the public following a medical examination.

Life
Black began her gender transition at the age of 15, running away from the farm she worked at near Galeyville, South Carolina, and living as a woman from then on. Black ran away to Charleston, South Carolina, and was invited to become a house servant in a manison, where she entered into a relationship with a male retainer, who accepted her female gender identity.

Later in Winter Garden, Florida, Black met Alonzo Sabbe, who was severely ill at the time. After his recovery, he asked Black to marry him. After their marriage, Alonzo and Black adopted a son, Willie Sabbe, who was the son of a cousin who deserted him as a three-week-old child after a visit to Florida. The couple moved to Sanford, Florida, and raised the child. Alonzo Sabbe died shortly after the marriage and Black later married Muster Black, a World War I vet, at the home of Joanna Moore, the principal of Sanford's Black elementary school. Muster Black died seven years after the marriage, after which Georgia was able to collect a pension from the Veterans Administration as a widow.

During the last days of her life Black's transgender identity was discovered by Dr. Orville Barks, the county physician who performed the autopsy on her body after her death. After discovering Black's male genitalia, the physician publicly revealed Georgia's information. The leak was met with backlash from the local community to Dr. Barks, as well as to the local newspaper, the Sanford Herald, for publishing a front page story about the revelation. Black remained a respected member of the Sanford community up to her death in June.

Legacy
In her book Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity, C. Riley Snorton cites Black as an example of a figure who emerges in the queer press and offers a way to "narrate trans embodiment in the postwar, early Cold War period" as her story reflects on the violence and aftermath of World War II, the decolonial struggles throughout the Global South and Jim Crow segregation in the United States. Snorton argues that the narrative of Georgia Black, as covered by Ebony, illustrates how black trans figures "were mobilized to meditate on intramural black life, not simply as it related to matters of gender and sexuality but also as it pertained to shifting notions of human valuation."