---
title: "Combahee River Collective — AP African American Studies"
description: "Boston-based Black feminist organization of the 1970s named for Tubman's Combahee River raid. Key to AP Topic 4.13 on Black feminism and intersectionality."
canonical: "https://fiveable.me/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/combahee-river-collective"
type: "key-term"
subject: "AP African American Studies"
unit: "Unit 4"
---

# Combahee River Collective — AP African American Studies

## Definition

The Combahee River Collective was a Boston-based Black feminist and lesbian organization founded in the 1970s, named after Harriet Tubman's Combahee River raid, that argued freeing Black women would require destroying all systems of oppression and would therefore free everyone.

## What It Is

The Combahee River Collective was a group of Black feminist and lesbian activists who organized in Boston in the 1970s. Their name is the first clue to how they saw themselves. They chose it to honor [Harriet Tubman](/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/harriet-tubman "fv-autolink")'s Combahee River raid during the Civil War, the operation that freed over 700 [enslaved African Americans](/ap-african-american-studies/unit-2/19-black-political-radical-resistance/study-guide/irfzuDC8oenkD4GE "fv-autolink"). By naming themselves after Tubman's raid, they deliberately placed their 1970s activism in a much longer line of Black women's resistance stretching back through Tubman, Sojourner Truth, and Jarena Lee.

Their big idea, laid out in the Collective Statement of 1977, was that [racism](/ap-african-american-studies/unit-4/1-the-ngritude-and-negrismo-movements/study-guide/eK9QyiGxxk1iteQm "fv-autolink"), sexism, and other forms of oppression don't operate one at a time. Black women experience them simultaneously, so a movement that fights only racism or only sexism leaves Black women behind. The Collective flipped that into a powerful claim. If you build a movement that frees Black women, you have to dismantle every system of oppression at once, which means everyone gets free. This is the intellectual seed of what Kimberlé Crenshaw would later name intersectionality.

## Why It Matters

The Combahee River Collective sits in Topic 4.13 (The Black Feminist Movement, Womanism, and Intersectionality) in [Unit 4](/ap-african-american-studies/unit-4 "fv-autolink"): Movements and Debates. It directly supports learning objective 4.13.A, which asks you to explain how the twentieth-century Black feminist movement drew inspiration from earlier [Black women's activism](/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/black-womens-activism "fv-autolink"). The Collective is basically the textbook case for that objective. Their name reaches back to Tubman, and their argument builds on centuries of Black women highlighting their unique experience of racism and sexism combined (EK 4.13.A.1 and 4.13.A.2). If you can explain why a 1970s Boston organization named itself after an 1863 military raid, you've demonstrated exactly the continuity skill this topic tests.

## Connections

### [Collective Statement (1977) (Unit 4)](/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/collective-statement-1977)

The Statement is the Collective's signature document and the thing the exam actually quotes. It's where the group put their theory in writing, arguing that Black women's liberation requires ending all [interlocking systems of oppression](/ap-african-american-studies/unit-4/14-interlocking-systems-of-oppression/study-guide/CZielrxhDkY9k8KM "fv-autolink"). Know the group and the document as a pair.

### [Kimberlé Crenshaw (Unit 4)](/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/kimberle-crenshaw)

Crenshaw coined the word '[intersectionality](/ap-african-american-studies/unit-2/14-freedom-womens-rights-and-education/study-guide/bp2sHi0HFb0u4pX4 "fv-autolink")' in 1989, but the Combahee River Collective described the idea over a decade earlier. The Collective is the practice and the early theory; Crenshaw gave it the name scholars use today.

### [Black women's activism (Unit 4)](/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/black-womens-activism)

The Collective is the clearest bridge between eighteenth- and nineteenth-century activists like [Jarena Lee](/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/jarena-lee "fv-autolink"), Sojourner Truth, and Harriet Tubman and the 1970s Black feminist movement. Their name was a public claim that they were continuing Tubman's work, not starting from scratch.

### [Womanist (Unit 4)](/ap-african-american-studies/key-terms/womanist)

Alice Walker's term 'womanist' and the Collective's Black feminism are parallel responses to the same problem. Both grew out of Black women feeling sidelined by mainstream feminism and by male-led civil rights organizing, but they're distinct frameworks within Topic 4.13.

## On the AP Exam

Expect multiple-choice questions that test continuity, not trivia. Common stems ask why the Collective named itself after Tubman's Civil War raid (answer: to root 1970s Black feminism in earlier Black women's activism), how the 1977 Statement built on activists like Truth and Lee, and why the Statement is historically significant as one of the first frameworks to explicitly address Black women's simultaneous experience of racism and sexism. No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but it's strong evidence for short-answer or essay prompts about how the Black feminist movement drew on earlier traditions. The move the exam rewards is connecting the 1970s back to the nineteenth century, so practice explaining the name choice in one clean sentence.

## Combahee River Collective vs Intersectionality (Kimberlé Crenshaw)

Easy mix-up on timing and credit. The Combahee River Collective articulated the core idea in its 1977 Statement, that Black women face racism and sexism as simultaneous, interlocking oppressions. Kimberlé Crenshaw coined the actual term 'intersectionality' later, in 1989. On an MCQ, the Collective is the 1970s organization and statement; Crenshaw is the scholar who named the framework. Don't credit Crenshaw with the 1977 Statement or the Collective with the word itself.

## Key Takeaways

- The Combahee River Collective was a Boston-based Black feminist and lesbian organization active in the 1970s.
- The group named itself after Harriet Tubman's Combahee River raid, which freed over 700 enslaved African Americans, to tie its activism to earlier Black women's resistance.
- Its 1977 Collective Statement argued that Black women's liberation requires destroying all systems of oppression, which would free all members of society.
- The Collective expressed the core idea of intersectionality more than a decade before Kimberlé Crenshaw coined the term in 1989.
- On the exam, this term tests learning objective 4.13.A, explaining how 1970s Black feminism drew inspiration from activists like Tubman, Truth, and Lee.

## FAQs

### What was the Combahee River Collective?

A Boston-based Black feminist and lesbian organization founded in the 1970s. It's best known for its 1977 Statement arguing that Black women's liberation would require dismantling all systems of oppression, freeing everyone.

### Why was it named after the Combahee River?

The name honors Harriet Tubman's Civil War raid on the Combahee River, which freed over 700 enslaved African Americans. The choice deliberately connected 1970s Black feminism to the long tradition of Black women's resistance.

### Did the Combahee River Collective invent the term intersectionality?

No. Kimberlé Crenshaw coined the word 'intersectionality' in 1989. But the Collective's 1977 Statement described the underlying idea, that Black women experience racism and sexism as interlocking oppressions, more than a decade earlier.

### How is the Combahee River Collective different from womanism?

The Collective was an actual organization with a written 1977 Statement, while womanism is a term Alice Walker created to describe a perspective centering Black women's experiences. Both belong to Topic 4.13, but one is a group and the other is a framework.

### Is the Combahee River Collective on the AP African American Studies exam?

Yes. It appears in Topic 4.13 under Unit 4 and supports learning objective 4.13.A. Questions typically ask how the group's name and 1977 Statement connected 1970s Black feminism to earlier activists like Tubman, Truth, and Lee.

## Related Study Guides

- [4.13 The Black Feminist Movement, Womanism, and Intersectionality](/ap-african-american-studies/unit-4/13-black-feminist-movement-womanism-and-intersectionality/study-guide/hflrqrysG5O7jMOP)

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