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Pauli Murray: Confronting the Law

  • Morton Theatre 195 West Washington St Athens, GA USA (map)

Pauli Murray: Confronting the Law

Performed by Becky Stone

This performance is presented by the Athens Chautauqua Society with the generous support of Athens Downtown Development Authority in partnership with the Greenville Chautauqua Festival entitled “Challenge: Accepted!

 

Reserve your FREE tickets to the June 12th programs on Pauli Murray (3:00 p.m.) and Robert Kennedy (7:00 p.m.) at the Morton Theater:

Event Summary

Pauli Murray took part in the movements for labor, civil rights, and women’s rights. Murray was the first Black person to earn a JSD from Yale, a National Organization for Women founder, a poet, an Episcopal priest, and life-long friend of Eleanor Roosevelt. When North Carolina’s Becky Stone (creator of historical interpretations of Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Maya Angelou, and Josephine Baker) first performed her riveting historical interpretation of Murray, she was often asked “Why havent I heard of Pauli Murray before?” Join Athens Chautauqua Society for this virtual event.

FREE EVENT

Event Support

Co-sponsored by the Association for the Study of African American Life and History-Athens Branch


About Pauli Murray

Pauli Murray helped transform the law of the land.

She challenged “Jim Crow.” The overturning of Plessy v. Ferguson and the success of Brown v. Board of Education was in great part based on her legal tactic of challenging “separate” instead of “equal” and Pauli’s 746 page “States’ Laws on Race and Color.” 


She challenged “Jane Crow” (a term she coined). Murray provided the argument Ruth Bader Ginsburg used to persuade the Supreme Court that the 14th Amendment protects not only blacks but also women – and potentially other minorities – from discrimination.


A mixed-race orphan, Pauli grew up in segregated Depression Era North Carolina. UNC Graduate School rejected because of her race. Harvard Graduate School rejected her because of her sex. In spite of it all, Pauli graduated first in her class at Howard Law School, and at Yale University where she earned her doctorate of law, her name now graces one of the university’s new colleges.

About Becky Stone

Becky Stone moved to Fairview NC from her home in Philadelphia 40 years ago. Since then, she has raised 4 children with her husband who publishes the garden quarterly, GreenPrints. Becky holds degrees from Vassar College and Villanova University. She has worked in education and theater, and volunteers in many capacities in her community. Becky indulges her creative spirit in storytelling, acting, singing, some “dancing.” “I learn something every time I step in front of an audience – about the audience, about the art, about myself.” Becky presents Chautauqua characters Pauli Murray, Harriet Tubman, Rosa Parks, Maya Angelou, and Josephine Baker and she developed them all, but one, for the Greenville Chautauqua.

 

Resource Guide

  • Pauli Murray by Becky Stone

    My Name is Pauli Murray” on Amazon Prime

    Bell-Scott, Patricia. The Firebrand and the First Lady: Portrait of a Friendship: Pauli Murray, Eleanor Roosevelt, and the Struggle for Social Justice. Alfred Knopf, 2016

    Very readable. Chapters alternate between the two women. The reader learns as much about Eleanor Roosevelt as Pauli Murray, an unlikely friendship suddenly becomes understandable.

    Murray, Pauli. Pauli Murray: The Autobiography of a Black Activist, Feminist, Lawyer, Priest, and Poet. The University of Tennessee Press, 1989 (Originally published: Song in a Weary Throat. Harper & Row, 1987)

    Murray’s autobiography is filled with details that may seem overwhelming, but you begin to understand her through the details of her life.

    Murray, Pauli. Dark Testament and other poems. Silvermine Publishers, Inc., 1970

    There are some powerful poems in this, her only collection. Some personal, some political, all movingly inspired.

    Murray, Pauli. Proud Shoes: The Story of An American Family. Harper & Row, 1956

    I found this book fun to read because of the colorful characters and how clearly Pauli Murray loves them. Not all of the memories are easy to handle, but there is joy in the fact that they are from a child’s perspective.

    Rosenberg, Rosalind. Jane Crow: The Life of Pauli Murray. Oxford University Press, 2017

    An all-encompassing, informative biography. Reveals Murray’s angst about her gender identity in a sympathetic way that changed my understanding of the issues involved in gender identity.

  • “Hope is a song in a weary throat.”

    “It was never hardship which hurt so much as the contrast between what we had and what the white children had.”

    “It seemed as if there were only two kinds of people in the world – They and We – White and Colored. … It pervaded the air I breathed. I learned it in hundreds of ways.”

    “I wondered why some people were called white and some called colored when there were so many colors and you couldn’t tell where one left off and the other began. Some folks were Aunt Pauline’s color – strawberries and cream – and some were like licorice. Some were cream chocolate and some were dark chocolate. Some were caramel and some were peanut butter. Some were like molasses taffy after it has been pulled awhile and some were like gingerbread. I’d heard somebody say colored people were like a flower garden but I thought they were more like good things to eat.”

    “There was pride on both sides of the Fitzgerald family, but my greatest inheritance, perhaps, was dogged persistence, a granite quality of endurance in the face of calamity.”

    “One person plus one typewriter constitutes a movement.”

    “What is often called exceptional ability is nothing more than persistent endeavor.”

    “Black women, historically, have been doubly victimized by the twin immoralities of Jim Crow and Jane Crow. … Black women, faced with these dual barriers, have often found that sex bias is more formidable than racial bias.”

    “I’ve lived to see my lost causes found.”

    “It had taken me almost a lifetime to discover that true emancipation lies in the acceptance of the whole past, in deriving strength from all my roots, in facing up to the degradation as well as the dignity of my ancestors.”

    “It may be that when historians look back on 20th century America, all roads will lead to Pauli Murray . . . civil rights, feminism, religion, literature, law, sexuality – no matter what the subject, there is Pauli.” - Susan Ware, Historian

  • 1910

    Born in Baltimore, Maryland to Agnes Fitzgerald and William Murray.

    1914

    Moved to Durham to live with grandparents and her aunt after whom she was named, Pauline Fitzgerald Dame. Pauli’s mother had died and her father was unable to take care of the children.

    1926

    Murray graduates high school at the head of her class and attends a New York City school in order to meet entrance requirements at Hunter College

    1933

    Graduates from Hunter College and works for the Works Progress Administration (WPA), Workers Defense League and the NYC Remedial Reading Project.

    1938

    Murray’s application to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill graduate school rejected due to her race. Writes a letters to the Chancellor, and President Roosevelt and sends a copy to the First Lady.

    1940

    She is arrested and jailed for protesting Virginia law requiring segregation on buses.

    1941

    Enters Howard Law School and encounters sex discrimination from faculty and students.

    1944

    Graduates from Howard Law School first in her class (and the only female). Applies for admission to Harvard Law School’s graduate program but is rejected because of her gender. Enrolls at University of California’s Boalt Hall Law School.

    1951

    Writes the States’ Laws on Race and Color for the Women’s Division of the Methodist Church, the “bible” for civil rights lawyers.

    1960

    Travels to Ghana and teaches at the Ghana School of Law in Accra.

    1961

    John F. Kennedy appoints Murray to the President’s Commission on the Status of Women (PCSW) Committee on Civil and Political rights.

    1964

    Murray co-authors “Jane Crow and the Law: Sex discrimination and Title VII,” in which she draws parallels between sex-based discrimination with Jim Crow laws.

    1965

    Murray receives a J.S.D from Yale, the first African-American to receive this degree.

    1966

    Along with Betty Friedan and thirty others, founds the National Organization for Women (NOW).

    1977

    Pauli Murray becomes the first African-American female priest to be ordained by the Episcopal Church.

    1985

    Pauli Murray dies of pancreatic cancer in Pittsburgh, PA.

    2012

    Murray elevated to sainthood by the Episcopal Church

  • The Many Lives of Pauli Murray, article from The New Yorker magazine

    Lesson plans about Pauli Murray

    Ahead of Her Time and Behind the Scenes: The inspirational Life of Pauli Murray” by UNC Chapel Hill on Youtube

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April 22

Eleanor Roosevelt: America’s Extraordinary First Lady

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June 12

Robert F. Kennedy: Keeping the Peace