Unita Blackwell

Unita Blackwell
Born U.Z.
(1933-03-18) March 18, 1933
Lula, Mississippi
Residence Mayersville, Mississippi
Nationality United States
Known for First female African-American mayor in Mississippi

Unita Blackwell (born March 18, 1933) is an American civil rights activist who was the first African-American woman, and the tenth African American, to be elected mayor in the U.S. state of Mississippi.[1] Blackwell was a project director for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and helped organize voter drives for African Americans across Mississippi. She is also a founder of the US China Peoples Friendship Association, a group dedicated to promoting cultural exchange between the United States and China. Barefootin', Blackwell's autobiography, published in 2006, charts her activism.[2]

Early life

Unita Blackwell was born on March 18, 1933, in Lula, Mississippi, to sharecroppers Virda Mae and Willie Brown.[1][3][4][5][6] Blackwell's uncle gave her the name U.Z., which she kept until she was in the sixth grade when her teacher told her that she needed "a real name, not just initials". Blackwell and her teacher decided on Unita Zelma.[7]

Blackwell and her parents lived in Lula, until 1936 when she was three years old; Blackwell's father left the plantation on which he worked, and fled to Memphis, Tennessee, fearing for his life after he confronted his boss about speaking to his wife.[8] Soon afterwards, Blackwell and her mother left the plantation to live with him.[9] Blackwell's family traveled frequently in search of work.[10] On June 20, 1938, Blackwell's parents separated due to religious differences. Blackwell and her mother went to West Helena, Arkansas, to live with Blackwell's great aunt so that she had the opportunity to receive an education.[9] A quality education in Mississippi was not an option for Blackwell because the schools there were centered on the cultivation of crops and the plantation system.[11] While living in West Helena, Blackwell often visited her father in Memphis. During the summer months she would leave West Helena and live with her grandfather and grandmother in Lula, where she helped plant and harvest cotton.[12] Blackwell spent a majority of her early years chopping cotton in Mississippi, Arkansas, and Tennessee and peeling tomatoes in Florida.[13] She was 14 when she finished the eighth grade, the final year of school at Westside, a school in West Helena for black children.[14] Blackwell had to quit school to earn for her family.[10]

Marriage and move

Blackwell was 25 when she first met Jeremiah Blackwell, a cook for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.[15] A few years later, they traveled to Clarksdale, Mississippi, and were married by a justice of the peace.[16]

In January 1957, Blackwell became extremely ill and was taken to the hospital in West Helena where she was pronounced dead. She was later found to be alive in her hospital room, and claims to have had a near-death experience.[17] On July 2, 1957, the couple's only son, Jeremiah Blackwell Jr. (Jerry), was born.[16][18] In 1960, Jeremiah's grandmother, "Miss Vashti", died. A few months later, the Blackwells moved into the shotgun house that his grandmother had left to him, in Mayersville, Mississippi, a town of nearly five-hundred people.[13][16] The Blackwell family was eventually able to build a larger brick home, but Blackwell wanted to keep the smaller house inherited from Jeremiah's grandmother.[10] After settling in Mayersville, Blackwell began to get involved in the Civil Rights Movement.[13]

I am grateful for this house...I kept it because it reminded me of where I came from.—Unita Blackwell[19]

Civil rights activism

Voting discrimination

Blackwell first got involved in the Civil Rights Movement in June 1964, when two activists from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee came to Mayersville and held meetings in the church she belonged to concerning African Americans' right to vote.[20][21][22][23] The following week she and seven others went to the courthouse to take a voter registration test so that they could vote.[24][25] While they were outside the courthouse waiting to take the test, a group of white farmers from the area heard what was happening and tried to scare them off.[24] The group stayed there all day, but only two were able to take the test. The racism that the group experienced, Blackwell says, made that day "the turning point" of her life.[26] Jeremiah and Unita lost their jobs the next day after their employer found out that they had been part of the group.[27] After losing her job, Blackwell recounts her family's means of survival:

We had a garden; people would give us a pot of beans...SNCC was supposed to send us eleven dollars every two weeks. My husband worked three months of the year for the Army Corps of Engineers, then we'd buy lots of canned goods —Unita Blackwell[19]

Blackwell attempted to pass the test three times over the next few months. In early fall she took the test successfully and became a registered voter.[28]

When the United States Commission on Civil Rights came to Mississippi in January 1965, Blackwell testified in front of them about her experiences with voter discrimination:[29][30]

I filled it out and I had section 97 and I wrote it down and looked it over and I picked some of the words out of, you know, what I had wrote down; put that in there and turned it over. And I misspelled 'length' and I said 'Oh, my Lord.' And so then I filled out the rest of it and when I got through I handed it to her, and I said 'Well, I misspelled this, and well, I didn't date the top,' and she said 'Oh, that's all right, it's all right, it's all right.' And then she ran and got the book and [registered me]. —Unita Blackwell[31]

As a result of Blackwell's involvement with voter registration campaigns, Blackwell and other activists endured constant harassment.[32]

SNCC and other movements

After meeting Fannie Lou Hamer in the summer of 1964 and hearing her experiences in the civil rights movement, Blackwell decided to join the SNCC.[33][34] As a project director for the SNCC, she organized voter registration drives across Mississippi.[35][36][37] Later that year, she became a member on the executive committee of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP), which provided a party for voters that SNCC had been registering to vote.[6][13][38][39] In late August she and 67 other activists left Mississippi to represent the MFDP at the 1964 Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in an attempt to get the MFDP seated as delegates.[40] They were unsuccessful in getting seats, but the move brought the party and the Mississippi civil rights movement into the public eye.[41]

In the late 1960s Blackwell worked as a community development specialist with the National Council of Negro Women. In the 1970s, through the National Council of Negro Women, she worked on a development program for low-income housing and encouraged people across the country "to build their own homes."[13] During her time participating in the civil rights movement, she was jailed over 70 times because of her role in civil rights protests and other actions.[32]

Blackwell v. Issaquena County Board of Education

The SNCC pin.

The Blackwells filed a suit, Blackwell v. Issaquena County Board of Education, against the Issaquena County Board of Education on April 1, 1965, after the principal suspended over 300 black children, including Jerry, the Blackwells' son, for wearing pins that depicted a black hand and a white hand clasped with the word "SNCC" below them.[42] The suit covered several issues including the students use of the "freedom" pins, and asked that the Issaquena County School District desegregate their schools per the Supreme Court Ruling, Brown v. Board of Education.[43] The United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, decided that the students were being disruptive with their use of the freedom pins, but that the school district had to desegregate their schools to comply with federal law, by the Fall of 1965.[44] The case was taken to the United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit, in July 1966, where the previous decision by the District Court was upheld.[45] Due to the case resulting in a desegregation plan, Blackwell referred to it as "one of the very first desegregation cases in Mississippi."[46]

Blackwell's son and approximately 50 other children boycotted the school, because of its decision to not let the children wear the SNCC freedom pins.[47] As a result, Blackwell and some other activists in the community decided that it was vital to school those children. She helped open freedom schools in Issaquena County, to resolve the issue.[48] The schools became popular and continued to teach classes every summer until 1970, when the local schools finally desegregated.[49]

Political career and late life

Blackwell has been on 16 diplomatic missions to China since 1973.[50] As part of her commitment to better relations between the United States and China, she served as President of the US China Peoples Friendship Association for six years, an association dedicated to promoting cultural exchange between the United States and China.[13] Blackwell was appointed to the U.S. National Commission on the International Year of the Child.[10] She was elected Mayor of Mayersville in 1976 and held this office until 2001, making her the first female African-American mayor in Mississippi.[51][52][53][54]

As mayor, she oversaw the construction of several sets of public housing, the first time that federal housing had been built in Issaquena County.[50][55] Blackwell obtained federal grant money that provided Mayersville with police and fire protection, a public water system, paved streets, housing accommodations for the elderly and disabled, and other infrastructure.[13] She gained national attention by traveling across the country to promote the construction of low-income housing.[32]

Blackwell also served on the Democratic National Committee and as co-chairman of the Mississippi Democratic Party.[56] The Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party sent Blackwell and three other delegates to the 1964 Democratic National Convention in New Jersey.[32] Their voices heard at the Convention helped contribute to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965.[32] In late 1982 Blackwell went to the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and received a Master's Degree in Regional Planning.[50] Although Blackwell did not attend high school, the National Rural Fellows Program helped her gain admittance to the University of Massachusetts by awarding her a scholarship and providing her credit based on activism and life experience.[13]

As part of her community development efforts, she helped found Mississippi Action for Community Education (MACE), a community-development organization in Greenville, Mississippi.[57] From 1990 to 1992, Blackwell was president of the National Conference of Black Mayors.[58][59] In 1991, she co-founded the Black Women Mayors' Conference as a corollary to the National Conference of Black Mayors and served as its first president.[13] Blackwell became a voice for rural housing and development, and in 1979 President Jimmy Carter invited her to an Energy Summit at Camp David. Blackwell was also awarded a US$350,000 Genius Grant from a prestigious MacArthur Fellowship in 1992, for her part in creating the Deer River housing development among other creative solutions in her state.[50][60][61] Blackwell ran for Congress in 1993, but she was defeated by Bennie Thompson in the primary.[13]

In January 2008 she disappeared from her hotel in Atlanta while attending commemoration ceremonies for Martin Luther King Jr., and was found later at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.[13][62] She was reported as having been in the early stages of dementia in 2008.[63] Currently, Blackwell resides in a nursing home on Mississippi's Gulf Coast.[64]

Barefootin': Life Lessons from the Road to Freedom

Blackwell, with help from JoAnne Prichard Morris, wrote an autobiography that covers her life working as a sharecropper for her parents, being elected Mayor of Mayersville causing her rise from "Poverty to Power", and her actions in the Civil Rights Movement. It was published in 2006 by Crown Publishing, a subsidiary of Random House.[65]

Blackwell’s life is considered to be a “tale of the travel from extreme poverty to international success,” and her legendary story is retold in her autobiography,[32] in which she recounts becoming involved with voter registration:

In 1963, only 3 percent of voting-age black people were registered to vote in the entire state….This was one of those understood rules in Mississippi: voting was for white people only…but the more I heard about white people being so against it, the more I started thinking there must be something to this voting. —Unita Blackwell[66]

In recounting the period when she first arrived in Mayersville, Mississippi, she says:

Jeremiah and our seven-year-old son, Jerry, and I lived in a falling-down three-room house that had belonged to Jeremiah’s grandmother. I was thirty-one years old, stuck in poverty, and trapped by the color of my skin on a rough road to nowhere, doing what Mississippi black people had been doing for generations—working in the cotton fields. —Unita Blackwell[67]

When reflecting on where she got the courage to join SNCC and register voters, she writes in the autobiography:

You don’t have to think about courage to have it. You don’t have to feel courageous to be courageous. You don’t sit down and say you’re going to be courageous. At the moment of action, you don’t see it as a courageous act. Courage is the most hidden thing from your eye or mind until after it’s done. There’s some inner something that tells you what’s right. You know you have to do it to survive as a human being. You have no choice. —Unita Blackwell[68]

In the book's introduction and conclusion, Blackwell reminisces on her mother's influence, which gave her the courage to "go Barefootin,'" and she urges readers to do the same:

The first step to bringing about change, to starting a movement and making a movement work, to moving yourself toward a more productive and meaningful life is to set out barefootin’…Barefootin’ means being open to possibilities and being available to act when one possibility comes along. It means starting right where you are and learning as you go. Your first step doesn’t have to be a big one. Just a little step will do.—Unita Blackwell[69]

Honors and awards

References

  1. 1 2 Blackwell 2006, p. 10.
  2. "Wellesley Centers for Women  — Stepping Out and Moving Forward". wcwonline.org. Retrieved 2008-04-27.
  3. "Rural American Women Voice Concerns at Conference". The Milwaukee Sentinel. 1978-02-25. p. 4. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
  4. Morrison 1987, p. 99.
  5. "The African American Registry". Retrieved 2009-07-24.
  6. 1 2 Middleton, Britt (18 March 2012). "This Day in Black History: March 18, 1933". BET National News. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  7. Blackwell 2006, pp. 11, 47–48.
  8. Blackwell 2006, pp. 12–13.
  9. 1 2 Blackwell 2006, p. 13.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Haskins 1999, p. 15.
  11. Garvey, Mike. "Oral History with Honorable Unita Blackwell". Mississippi Oral History Program of University of Southern Mississippi. The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Oral History and Cultural Heritage. Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  12. Blackwell 2006, pp. 13–14.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Carey, Charles W. "Blackwell, Unita". African-American Political Leaders, Revised Edition, A to Z of African Americans. Facts on File, Inc. Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  14. Blackwell 2006, pp. 48–49.
  15. Blackwell 2006, pp. 52–53.
  16. 1 2 3 Morrison 1987, p. 101.
  17. Blackwell 2006, pp. 56–58.
  18. Blackwell 2006, p. 55.
  19. 1 2 Phelps, Shirelle (1998). Contemporary Black Biography: Profiles from the International Black Community. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research.
  20. Blackwell 2006, pp. 65–74.
  21. "Unita Blackwell". Washington University Film & Media Archive. Archived from the original on October 2, 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-09.
  22. Biewen, John; Kate Cavett (1994). "Oh Freedom Over Me: Selected Interviews, Unita Blackwell". American Public Media. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  23. Hampton, Henry; Steve Fayer (1990). Voices of Freedom. New York, NY: Bantam Books. ISBN 0-553-05734-0.
  24. 1 2 Blackwell 2006, pp. 3–8, 75.
  25. "Interview with Unita Blackwell". Blackside, Inc. 1986-05-07. Retrieved 2009-07-24.
  26. Blackwell 2006, p. 7.
  27. Blackwell 2006, pp. 75–76.
  28. Blackwell 2006, pp. 76–77, 103–104.
  29. Blackwell 2006, pp. 123–124.
  30. "Racial and Ethnic Tensions in American Communities: Poverty, Inequality, and Discrimination—Volume VII: The Mississippi Delta Report — Chapter 3: Voting Rights and Political Representation in the Mississippi Delta". United States Commission on Civil Rights. Retrieved 2009-12-29.
  31. "Voting in Mississippi — A report of The United States Commission on Civil Rights" (PDF). United States Commission on Civil Rights. 1965. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 11, 2010. Retrieved 2009-12-29.
  32. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Haskins 1999, p. 16.
  33. Blackwell 2006, pp. 82–83.
  34. Klopfer 2005, p. 468.
  35. Blackwell 2006, pp. 83–92.
  36. Schwartz, Robert J. (2002). Can You Make A Difference?: A Memoir of a Life for Change. New York, NY: Lantern Books. ISBN 1-59056-032-9.
  37. Schine, Cathleen (2009-11-30). "Growing Up Female". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
  38. Blackwell 2006, pp. 104–106.
  39. Crawford 1993, p. 21.
  40. Blackwell 2006, pp. 106–117.
  41. Blackwell 2006, pp. 111–118.
  42. Blackwell 2006, pp. 133–136.
  43. Blackwell 2006, p. 136.
  44. Blackwell 2006, pp. 136–137, 139.
  45. Blackwell v. Issaquena County Board of Education, 363 F.2d 749 (United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit July 21, 1966) (“The judgment is affirmed.”).
  46. 1 2 3 4 "Unita Blackwell". Coahoma, Mississippi Civil Rights Project. Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  47. Blackwell 2006, p. 137.
  48. Blackwell 2006, pp. 137–139.
  49. Blackwell 2006, p. 139.
  50. 1 2 3 4 Kilborn, Peter (1992-06-17). "A Mayor And Town Rise Jointly". New York Times. Retrieved 2008-04-27.
  51. Klopfer 2005, pp. 418–19, 504.
  52. "Board Members". ruraldevelopment.org. Retrieved 2008-04-27.
  53. Williams, Juan (1987). Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years (1954–1965). New York, NY: Viking Penguin. ISBN 0-670-81412-1.
  54. Johnson, Rheta (28 February 2015). "Rheta Johnson: Voices speak through space and time". The Town Talk. Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. Gazette. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
  55. "Racial and Ethnic Tensions in American Communities: Poverty, Inequality, and Discrimination—Volume VII: The Mississippi Delta Report — Chapter 4: Findings and Recommendations". United States Commission on Civil Rights. Retrieved 2009-12-29.
  56. "Harvard University Institute of Politics  — Unita Blackwell". Retrieved 2009-07-25.
  57. "Tribute to Unita Blackwell(Senate  — June 23, 1992)". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  58. Klopfer 2005, p. 504.
  59. "Democrat delegates look back to '68 convention". The Daily Sentinel. Associated Press. August 25, 1996. p. 16. Retrieved March 15, 2011.
  60. Mills, Kay (2 August 1992). "Unita Blackwell: MacArthur Genius Award Caps a Creative Political Life". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 7, 2014.
  61. Teltsch, Kathleen (1992-06-16). "33 Win MacArthur Awards, Including 17 Women". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  62. "Mississippi mayor found safe". UPI. 2008-01-20. Retrieved 2009-12-28.
  63. "Unita Blackwell Found after Brief Scare". WLBT3. Associated Press. January 19, 2008. Retrieved 2008-06-08.
  64. Gates, Jimmie (June 13, 2014). "From sharecropper to presidential adviser". The Clarion-Ledger. Retrieved February 21, 2015.
  65. "Powell's Books  — Barefootin': Life Lessons from the Road to Freedom by Unita Blackwell with JoAnne Prichard Morris". powells.com. Retrieved 2008-05-06.
  66. Blackwell 2006, p. 67.
  67. Blackwell 2006, pp. 3-4.
  68. Blackwell 2006, p. 8.
  69. Blackwell 2006, p. 255.
  70. Lowrey, Erin (17 January 2014). "African American Military History Museum celebrate Black History month". WDAM. Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Retrieved 3 March 2015.

Bibliography

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