Today is Martin Luther King day in the USA. And today my favorite local
public radio station, WVXU 91.7,
rebroadcast an interview from September 2015 with Marian Spencer and Dorothy
Christenson, the author of KeepOn Fighting: The Life and Civil Rights Legacy of Marian A. Spencer. Marian
Spencer was 95 at the time of the interview.
Marian Spencer was and still is an amazing civil rights
activist locally and nationally. She was raised in Gallipolis, Ohio in the home
of her grandfather, a freed slave from West Virginia. She joined the NAACP when
she was 13. In 1938 she came to Cincinnati to attend the University of
Cincinnati. She earned a BA in English in 1942. In 1981 she became the first
black female president of the local NAACP and remains the only black female to
have held that position in the Cincinnati chapter. She was the first black
female to be elected to Cincinnati city council and served as Vice Mayor as a
member of the Charter party.
One of her most famous battles was against Coney Island in
1952. After her sons had heard a radio ad inviting children to Coney Island to
meet a local TV personality she called to verify. But once she told them they
were “Negroes” she was told that her children were not allowed. On July 4th
Spencer showed up at the gate of Coney Island and was banished by a guard
brandishing a gun.
Soon after her banishment she chaired the NAACP Legal Action
vs. Coney Island, Cincinnati, Ohio. The day Spencer showed up at the gate at
Coney Island she had enlisted the help of approximately 25 other
African-Americans to stand in line and be turned away. They all testified and were asked who called
them to go to Coney Island. All answered, “Marian Spencer.” When she took the
stand the attorney for Coney Island admonished her, “a white woman”, for
getting involved with the Negroes. He called her a Communist. Her simple reply
was “Sir, I am neither a white woman nor a Communist.”The NAACP subsequently won the case.
More recently Spencer spoke out against the controversial parks levy which was pushed by Mayor John Cranley. She initially supported the levy. But when she found out the money would only be used for capital projects and would become a charter amendment she pulled her support. The levy was voted down.
More recently Spencer spoke out against the controversial parks levy which was pushed by Mayor John Cranley. She initially supported the levy. But when she found out the money would only be used for capital projects and would become a charter amendment she pulled her support. The levy was voted down.
Much has changed since MLK marched and gave his life for
civil rights in the United States. Yes, we elected a black president…twice. But
there is still a lot that has not changed.
Unarmed black men (and children) are being murdered by rogue
policemen, who are indiscriminately protected by their blue brethren. We are seeing more black artists in the movies but the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences seems to be blind to that fact. OprahWinfrey is the most respected, wealthiest, influential and generous
black woman in the world, yet blacks still rate as the highest percentage of those
living in poverty and imprisoned in the United States, which touts itself as
the richest country in the world. The
face of our government, local state and federal, is still predominately white
men.
Today while visiting my 87-year-old father he sarcastically
remarked “I wish they’d make a holiday on my birthday.” This is not the first
time he’s made that crack and he is not the only person I have heard use this kind of coded language.
Yes a lot has changed, but much has not.
No comments :
Post a Comment