Preview

Constance Baker Motley's Life And Accomplishments

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
802 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Constance Baker Motley's Life And Accomplishments
Constance Baker Motley was born on September 14, 1921, in New Haven, Connecticut. She was the ninth of twelve children born to parents, whom emigrated from the island of Nevis in the West Indies. Her mother was Rachel Baker and she was a founder of the New Haven NAACP. Her father was Willoughby Alva Baker and he was a chef for student organizations at Yale University. At the age of fifteen, Constance joined the local NAACP were she was denied admission to a local skating rink and public beach. This is what sparked her interest in law and helped her pioneering career as a civil rights lawyer, lawmaker and judge (which spanned six decades) and was highlighted by numerous historic achievements, including the first African American elected to …show more content…

Her personal approach was also dignified. As a black woman practicing law in the South, she endured gawking and more than a few physical threats. But through those trials and tribulations, she still remained positive and influenced others to do the same. Constance Baker Motley was a very famous person to remember. She did a lot of things to help young individuals. This lady changed society because she was the first to serve in high ranking categories, which gave the African American race a chance to follow in her footsteps or even go beyond that. Constance Baker Motley died of congestive heart failure on September 28, 2005, at the age of eighty-four years old. Although she had assumed senior status as a judge in 1986, handling a reduce caseload, she continued to work until her death. She was survived by her husband, Joel Wilson Motley, whom she married in 1949, and she had one son Joel Motley and several siblings. Constance Baker Motley played a vital role in today's society because there are many people that will not be active in civil rights and the well-being of themselves and others. She will always be remembered of as one of the greatest women of lifetime history because she was positively influenced, which made her work be positive. This is a true role-model for people all across America to want to do something similar to what this woman did for the African American

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Bessie Virginia Blount was born on November 24, 1914, in Hickory, Virginia. During World War II as a part of her work working with wounded soldiers,, Blount invented a device to help amputees feed themselves, the apparatus. She invented the electric feeding device in 1951, a feeding tube that delivered one mouth full of food at a time. Blount device was not accepted by the American Veteran’s Administration, so Blount sold it to the French Government. Bessie Blount was once a physical therapist for Theodore Edison son of famed inventor Thomas Edison. Blount and Edison became very close friends while in his home Blount invented the disposable cardboard emesis basin, this invention was also rejected by the American Veterans Administration and…

    • 125 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Margaret was born March 23, 1984 to Nora and Augue DeFrancisco. She grew up in Chicago, Illinois with her mother and her older sister Regina. Margaret's father was a convicted drug dealer and wasn’t around much while she was growing up. Margaret and her sister were both known as good students and no one could recall them ever getting into trouble. The girls were also known for their beauty and this caught the attention of many men. This proved to be deadly to a man named Oscar Velazquez. Oscar had been going out with Margaret’s sister for three weeks when he was invited over to their house on the evening of June 6th 2000. That night the girls lured him into their basement and Margaret shot him in the back of the head using a gun she had gotten…

    • 332 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Bessie Coleman was born in Atlanta, Tx January 26,1892 She was the 10 out of 13 children she her mom and dad were George and Susan Coleman. When she was 9 her dad move away for better opportunities in oklahoma that was in 1901. In 1915 january 1 she went to chicago for a better life. From 1919 to 1921 june 15 she got her pilot's licence in france. In 1922 was her first public flight. In 1926 she was in an accident she was only 35 and died befor she was buried she had 3 funerals. Years later she had her own stamp. Her major influences was she was the first african american to fly a plane. The challenge she had to face was everyone thought she could not do…

    • 153 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    One of my personal favorite historical figures would be Mae Carol Jemison. She overcame the normalcy of a white man in space by becoming the first African American woman to go into space. First, I would ask her “how did you do it?” I really would like to know how she overcame all the pressure and abuse of being different in her field of study. Not many women during that time tried to get into the study of science. I admire Jemison for pursuing what she loved to do and not quitting because it was harder on her than the rest. Secondly, I would ask “would you do it all over again?” I would love to knw if it’s worth it to go through so much to be where she is now. If she would go through all her struggles to become an astronaut once more if she…

    • 170 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    According to www.biography.com, Madame C.J. Walker was born December 23, 1867 as Sarah Breedlove on a cotton plantation near Delta Louisiana. Sarah was the 5th child of Owen and Minerva Breedlove and the first in the family to be born free.…

    • 730 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    Although she was attending collage her father had one condition; that she must come home for all of his political events; so even when she was away at collage, politics were still a main part of her life. This did not help her relationship with Clarence. As she progressed in school Babcock formed more of her own opinions that were more and more in opposition to her father’s. “While in school Caroline’s interest in suffrage was starting to peek due to influences that surrounded her. Babcock sighed up for an economics class through Columbia. The coerce was taught by future President Woodrow Wilson. After attending the first two classes Babcock was in for a sexist roadblock, as she went to attend her 3rd class, and a sign was there to meet her reading “NO WOMEN ALOUD” ” 2. This incident was one of Babcock’s first encounters with true sexism facing woman of that time period; and peeked her interest in the cause of woman’s rights in America. Being such an educated woman in ways of Politics, Babcock knew the way of the game. This was a tremendous advantage when she started her work in suffrage. “In 1908, she was invited by Miss M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr, to become executive secretary of the National College Equal Suffrage League of which Miss Thomas was…

    • 1953 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Norma Sklarek Was Born On April 15, 1926, In New York City. Sklarek Was A Bright Student, Who Did Well At Hunter High An All Girls Magnet School That Catered To New York City’s Smartest Students. She Studied Architecture At Columbia University And In Became The First African American Female To Receive Her License. After Working Several Major Firms, Sklarek Became The First Black Woman To Receive A Fellowship From The American Institute Of Architect.…

    • 277 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Condoleezza Rice was born on a November 14, 1954, Birmingham, Alabama. Condi was born as the only child of Angeline and John Wesley Jr. Angeline (Condi’s Mother) was a teacher, while John (Condi’s father) was a counselor working at the same school Angeline did. Mid-1980’s – Rice went to a physical in Washington D.C., became director of the National Secretary Council. Rice grew up surrounded by Racism in the south, but went on to becoming the first woman and first African-American and graduated in Stanford University. Condi was appointed national secretary advisor by President George W. Bush, and she is the first black woman to serve as U.S. Secretary of State. Condoleezza had a hard time trusting people, the way she overcame that challenge is that she started being around them more and…

    • 546 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Shirley Chisholm was born November 30,1924. She was born in Brooklyn,New York. She was the first African American congresswoman in 1968. She represented New York State in the U.S House of Representatives for seven terms. Shirley Chisholm ran for Democratic nomination for the presidency in 1972. One major accomplishment was a financial aid program known as Search for Elevation, Education and Knowledge also know as SEEK. This passed into a law in 1965. Seek then reached out to students of color. This was offered to students lacked the necessary academic requirements for state universities.…

    • 373 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ann Nixon Cooper

    • 280 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Cooper was born in Shelbyville, Tennessee, on January 9, 1902, and raised in Nashville.[1] She moved to Atlanta, Georgia, in her early twenties with her husband, Albert Berry Cooper, a dentist,[1] and they had four children together.[2] During that time, she served more than fifty years in public work on the board of Gate City Nursery Association and also helped found the Girls Club for African American Youth.[3] Because there were no integrated Boy Scout troops in 1930's Atlanta, she wrote to the Boy Scouts in New York for help in starting Troop 95, Atlanta's first Boy Scout troop for African Americans.[4] When her husband died, Martin Luther King, Jr. sent Cooper a telegram; she also met with Coretta Scott King and saved photographs of the occasion.[5] Cooper first registered to vote on September 1, 1941. Though she was friends with elite black Atlantans like W. E. B. Du Bois, John Hope Franklin and Benjamin Mays, she didn't exercise her right to vote for years, because of her status as a black woman in a segregated and sexist society.[6]…

    • 280 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Ruby Bridges

    • 2345 Words
    • 10 Pages

    Ruby Nell Bridges was born on September 8, 1954, in Tylertown, Mississippi, and grew up on the farm her parents and grandparents sharecropped in Mississippi. When she was 4 years old, her parents, Abon and Lucille Bridges, moved to New Orleans, hoping for a better life in a bigger city. Her father got a job as a gas station attendant and her mother took night jobs to help support their growing family. Soon, young Ruby had two younger brothers and a younger sister. The fact that Ruby Bridges was born the same year that the Supreme Court's Brown v. Board of Education decision desegregated the schools is a notable coincidence to her early journey into civil rights activism. When Ruby was in kindergarten, she was one of many African-American students in New Orleans who were chosen to take a test determining whether or not she could attend a white school. It is said the test was written to be especially difficult so that students would have a hard time passing. The idea was if all the African-American children failed the test, New Orleans schools might be able to stay segregated for a while longer. She lived a mere five blocks from an all-white school, but attended kindergarten several miles away in an all-black segregated school…

    • 2345 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Ida B. Wells is well known for her influence during the civil rights and women’s rights movements. She was born in 1862 in Holly Springs Mississippi. Her parents died of yellow fever when she was only sixteen years old. She was to be split up from her other six siblings, but she dropped out of school and managed to get a job as a teacher and was able to keep her family together. She soon realized the discrimination in pay that there was as she was taking home thirty dollars compared to someone else’s eighty dollars a month. Then in 1884, she was confronted by a railroad conductor, asking her to move to the overly crowded smoking car. She refused and was drug off the train. She hired an attorney and tried to sue the railroad. Her attorney was bought off, and she had to hire a white attorney who eventually was able to get her a $500 settlement. However, the Supreme Court later overturned the decision, claiming “her intent was to harass, and was not in good faith to find a comfortable seat”. She gained recognition in the public for her writings about her experience and soon got an editorial job for a paper. She eventually became co-owner of the Free Speech Newspaper in Memphis where she became even more known for her investigative journalism on the lynchings of black men in the South. (Wikipedia.org)…

    • 1176 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Apush Dbq

    • 1561 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Born in Massachutes and was the first black person to recieve a PhD from Harvard…

    • 1561 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Barbara Jordan

    • 550 Words
    • 3 Pages

    A woman who has made her name very well known throughout history and American Government is the late Barbara Jordan. Barbara Charline Jordan, and attorney and American politician, was born on February 21, 1936 in Houston, Texas. Throughout her career she served as a congresswoman in the United States House of Representatives from 1973 to 1979, and as a professor at various universities and institutes. Jordan’s education began at Robertson elementary and Phillis Wheatley high school in Houston’s fifth ward. While attending Wheatley, she was a member of the honor society and participated in debates and public speaking engagements. After graduating in the top 5% of her high school class, Barbara Jordan would go on to attend Texas Southern University despite hopes of attending the still segregated University of Texas at Austin. Barbara Jordan graduated Magna Cum Laude from Texas Southern with a double major in political science and history. After contemplating of attending Harvard School of Law, Jordan went on to attend Boston University Law School where she graduated in 1959. After she passed both Massachusetts and Texas bar examinations, Barbara Jordan, being a woman so eager to throw herself into her profession, set up a law practice in her parents’ kitchen until she could save up enough money to move her firm to the fifth ward, a primarily African American populated area of Houston in which Jordan began her education and career, in 1962 and 1964, Barbara Jordan campaigned for the Texas House of Representatives. In 1966, Jordan ran for the Texas Senate and won the Democratic Primary with over 60 percent of the votes. Jordan’s Victory made her the first African American woman to serve in the Texas senate and the first African American elected to that body since 1883. She was re-elected to full in 1968 to 1972, when she became the first African American woman from a southern state to be elected to the United States House of Representatives. In 1974, Barbara Jordan…

    • 550 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This strong and amazing woman was born as a free slave. She was taken and raised by her aunt who cared for infirm patients and neighbors. I reflected this on my past. I was raised by my grandparents till the age of two. Dr. Crumpler moved to Charlestown, Massachusetts where she became a nurse. I have had a chance to meet new people at a camp that I went to while I was in Durham a whole summer. The clinical staff at duke, that had become friends’ with submitted letters recommending that I should be admitted to the camp. When reading the story I found some great facts about Dr. Crumpler. Like she was the first African American to go to New England Female Medical College and graduate from the college. Also that she graduated in 1864. After graduating from the college, she accomplished becoming the first African American woman in the United States to earn a medical degree.…

    • 1244 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics