Early life Susie Sumner Revels was born in Mississippi on January 1, 1870, the same year her father,
Hiram Revels, became the first African-American United States senator in US history. Revels' middle name "Sumner" was a tribute to
Charles Sumner, Hiram Revels' friend, who was sworn in as the Massachusetts senator the year Susie was born. Hiram Revels escorted Sumner at his swearing-in ceremony. Beginning at age 16, Revels taught school. In 1889, she began studying at
Rust College, graduating with honors in 1893 with a degree in "nurse training," The Revels family connection to Rust College was strong: her father taught theology classes there, and her sisters Ida and Maggie were also alumnae. After moving to Seattle, Cayton corresponded at length with Revels' father; Susie's increasingly long postscripts and Cayton's responses eventually amounted to a correspondence between Cayton and Susie herself. and continued working at the paper until it folded in 1913. Given that her husband sometimes traveled out of state, there were times when that associate editor role essentially meant putting out a newspaper. Revels and her husband were both light-skinned which, in the words of Richard S. Hobbs, "clearly played a role in the Caytons' early acceptance in Seattle." However, as Seattle grew, it became a less hospitable place for African Americans.
The Seattle Republican had never exactly been a "black paper," it had been a black-edited
Republican paper. As race relations deteriorated, fewer white people wanted to read a black-edited paper, and the paper never quite crossed over into being the newspaper specifically of the Black community. This (and some unsuccessful real estate speculation) led to a general decline in the Cayton's fortunes after 1907 or so, with them selling their
Capitol Hill house in 1909 (pushed out in part by increasing pressure for residential segregation) and shuttering
The Seattle Republican in 1913. Revels and her husband started another newspaper ''
Cayton's Weekly, in 1916, which targeted the Black community in Seattle. The paper ran until 1920 when it was replaced by Cayton's Monthly'' which only ran for two issues.
Later life In 1919, at the age of 49, Susie Revels Cayton was forced to seek employment as a "domestic" as the family experienced economic hardships. In her sixties, she became politically active and joined the
Communist Party, after being introduced to the organization by her son,
Revels Cayton, and was considered "one of the state's most prominent African American radicals". She joined the Communist Party in reaction to Depression-era Seattle, believing that only radical political change could address economic inequality. She became friends with activists
Paul Robeson and
Langston Hughes, and was admired by
Richard Wright. Langston Hughes dedicated a poem, Dear Mr. President, to her. Revels Cayton moved to Chicago in 1942, two years after her husband died, to be closer to her children. She continued advocating for progressive politics and communism to promote equality until she died in July 1943. == Charitable work ==