DOROTHY HEIGHT
G'day folks,
Welcome to the life of another great activist. Dorothy Irene Height an American administrator and educator, was a
civil rights and women's rights activist specifically focused on the
issues of African-American women, including unemployment, illiteracy,
and voter awareness.
Dorothy
Height was focused primarily on
improving the circumstances of and opportunities for African-American women.
“I have
been in the proximity of, and threatened by, the Klan; I have been called
everything people of color are called; I have been denied admission because of
a quota. I've had all of that, but I've also learned that getting bitter is not
the way.”
—Dorothy Height
Born in
Virginia in 1912, Dorothy Height was a civil rights and women's rights activist
focused primarily on improving the circumstances of and opportunities for
African-American women. She was a leader in addressing the rights of both women
and African Americans as the president of the National Council of Negro Women.
In the 1990s, she drew young people into her cause in the war against drugs,
illiteracy and unemployment. The numerous honors bestowed upon her include the
Presidential Medal of Freedom (1994) and the Congressional Gold Medal (2004).
She died on April 20, 2010, in Washington, D.C.
Born on
March 24, 1912, in Richmond, Virginia, African-American activist Dorothy Height
spent her life fighting for civil rights and women's rights. The daughter of a
building contractor and a nurse, Height moved with her family to Rankin,
Pennsylvania, in her youth. There, she attended racially integrated schools.
In high
school, Height showed great talent as an orator. She also became socially and
politically active, participating in anti-lynching campaigns. Height's skills
as a speaker took her all the way to a national oratory competition. Winning
the event, she was awarded a college scholarship.
Height
had applied to and been accepted to Barnard College in New York, but as the
start of school neared, the college changed its mind about her admittance,
telling Height that they had already met their quota for black students.
Undeterred, she applied to New York University, where she would earn two
degrees: a bachelor's degree in education in 1930 and a master's degree in
psychology in 1932.
After
working for a time as a social worker, Height joined the staff of the Harlem
YWCA in 1937. She had a life-changing encounter not long after starting work
there. Height met educator and founder of the National Council of Negro Women
Mary McLeod Bethune when Bethune and U.S. first lady Eleanor Roosevelt came to
visit her facility. Height soon volunteered with the NCNW and became close to
McLeod.
One of
Height's major accomplishments at the YWCA was directing the integration of all
of its centers in 1946. She also established its Center for Racial Justice in
1965, which she ran until 1977. In 1957, Height became the president of the
National Council of Negro Women. Through the center and the council, she became
one of the leading figures of the Civil Rights Movement. Height worked with
Martin Luther King Jr., A. Philip Randolph, Roy Wilkins, Whitney Young, John
Lewis and James Farmer—sometimes called the "Big Six" of the Civil
Rights Movement—on different campaigns and initiatives.
In 1963,
Height was one of the organizers of the famed March on Washington. She stood
close to Martin Luther King Jr. when he delivered his "I Have a
Dream" speech. Despite her skills as a speaker and a leader, Height was
not invited to talk that day.
Height
later wrote that the March on Washington event had been an eye-opening
experience for her. Her male counterparts "were happy to include women in
the human family, but there was no question as to who headed the
household," she said, according to the Los Angeles Times. Height
joined in the fight for women's rights. In 1971, she helped found the National
Women's Political Caucus with Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan and Shirley Chisholm.
While she
retired from the YWCA in 1977, Height continued to run the NCNW for two more
decades. One of her later projects was focused on strengthening the
African-American family. In 1986, Height organized the first Black Family
Reunion, a celebration of traditions and values. The event is still held
annually.
Height
received many honors for her contributions to society. In 1994, President Bill
Clinton awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom. She stepped down from
the presidency of the NCNW in the late 1990s, but remained the organization's
chair of the board until her death in 2010. In 2002, Height turned her 90th
birthday celebration into a fundraiser for the NCNW; Oprah Winfrey and Don King
were among the celebrities who contributed to the event.
In 2004,
President George W. Bush gave Height the Congressional Gold Medal. She later
befriended the first African-American president of the United States, Barack
Obama, who called her "the godmother of the Civil Rights Movement,"
according to The New York Times. Height died in Washington, D.C., on
April 20, 2010.
Former
first lady Hillary Clinton was among the many who mourned the passing of the
famed champion for equality and justice. Clinton told the Washington Post
that Height "understood that women's rights and civil rights are
indivisible. She stood up for the rights of women every chance she had."
Clancy's comment: Another woman who stood out from the crowd. Good for her. It wouldn't have been easy in those days, for a woman, let alone a black woman, to stand up and be counted.
I'm ...
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