She was an influential leader of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
By Harrison Smith Harrison Smith Obituary writer Email Bio Follow March 3 at 9:09 PM One late-summer morning in 1964, when the sun had not yet risen and many schools in Mississippi had still not enrolled black students, Jean Fairfax crisscrossed rural Leake County, bearing a kerosene lamp and a message of integration.
If the children enrolled, the men said, loans would be called in, and their parents would be fired from their jobs or forced from their homes. “She became the most influential single staff member in determining the direction we took on such issues as integration of black colleges and which industries we should target in employment cases,” Jack Greenberg, LDF’s longtime director-counsel, wrote in a 1994 memoir, “Crusaders in the Courts.”Supported by a $300,000 grant from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1967, she helped black workers submit more than 1,800 discrimination complaints to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Jean Emily Fairfax was born in Cleveland on Oct. 20, 1920. Her father was a water department administrator, and her mother was a social worker; both parents were the first members of their families to be born legally free in the United States, and both graduated from college.
Brasil Últimas Notícias, Brasil Manchetes
Similar News:Você também pode ler notícias semelhantes a esta que coletamos de outras fontes de notícias.
Sister Jean and Loyola won your heart, have returned for your soulLoyola-Chicago is not the powerful team that reached the Final Four last season, but the Ramblers are still here with something to prove.
Consulte Mais informação »
Rio Tinto lays bare the mining paradox of plentyIncluding a special payout, the digger led by Jean-Sébastien Jacques returned a whopping $13.5 bln to shareholders last year. Despite Rio's ample cash, risks are rising and safety problems like Vale’s will lift costs. That should keep the industry's growth ambitions in check.
Consulte Mais informação »
#MonumentalAmerican: Civil Rights activist Elizabeth JenningsIn honor of Black History Month, watch Ali Velshi and Stephanie Ruhle remember Elizabeth Jennings, who desegregated New York’s trolleys 100 years before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on an Alabama bus. Jennings is a MonumentalAmerican.
Consulte Mais informação »
Civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis, Democrats introduce bill to restore Voting Rights ActCivil rights icon Rep. John Lewis and Democrats introduced a bill to restore Voting Rights Act. In 2013, the Supreme Court struck down the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Consulte Mais informação »
A high school government class wanted to help solve civil rights crimes. So they drafted a bill that is now lawThey weren't born when the civil rights movement ended. Even many of their parents weren't alive then. And yet a high school class in Hightstown, New Jersey, has found an impressive way to shed light on unsolved civil rights crimes from the 1950s and '60s.
Consulte Mais informação »
Beyond slavery and the civil rights movement: Teachers should be integrating black history into U.S. history lessonsAnalysis: In a month rife with instances of racism, it's clear much of what students learn about black people’s distinct American story is hit-or-miss.
Consulte Mais informação »
Facebook bans far-right activist Tommy RobinsonRobinson repeatedly violated the social network's rules against posting dehumanizing material, Facebook said.
Consulte Mais informação »