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Vera Virgina Wesley Greene (Born 1890) was an African American Suffragist and the recording secretary for the Alpha Suffrage Club. She also worked as a seamstress and a manicurist.

Background
Greene was born in Missouri to John and Ellen Wesley. Her family lived in Sedalia Township, Pettis County, Missouri by 1900. Before her work as a Suffragist, she worked as a manicurist while living with her sister Sallie. In 1913, she married James A. Greene and lived in Chicago. Their daughter, Beverley Lorraine, was born October 4, 1915.

She is most known for her work as a suffragist in the Alpha Suffrage Club, created by Ida B. Wells January 30, 1913. She also wrote the resolutions for The Alpha Suffrage Club Record, thanking congressman Martin B. Madden for protecting African American rights. In this resolution she also endorsed Oscar De Priest to be the first African American alderman to Chicago city council. The Club's work in registering black women to vote is often considered to have been crucial to his election in 1915.

By 1930, Greene was divorced from her husband, and never remarried. After her divorce, she continued to live in Chicago with her daughter and worked as a maid for the railroad. She died in Chicago in April 1983. Her daughter, Beverley Lorraine Greene, graduated from the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign in 1936 and became the first African American woman to be licensed as an architect.