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Pauli Murray

Anna Pauline "Pauli" Murray (November 20, 1910 – July 1, 1985) was an American civil rights activist, advocate, legal scholar and theorist, author and – later in life – an Episcopal priest. Murray's work influenced the civil rights movement and expanded legal protection for gender equality.


Pauli Murray
Personal details
Born
Anna Pauline Murray

(1910-11-20)November 20, 1910
DiedJuly 1, 1985(1985-07-01) (aged 74)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
PartnerRenee Barlow (deceased 1973)
Sainthood
Feast day1 July
Venerated inEpiscopal Church (United States)
ChurchEpiscopal Church (United States)
Orders
Ordination1976 (deacon)
1977 (priest)
Personal details
DenominationChristianity (Anglican)
Academic background
EducationCity University of New York, Hunter (BA)
Howard University (LLB)
University of California, Berkeley (LLM)
Yale University (SJD)
General Theological
Seminary
(MDiv)
InfluencesMary Daly[1]
J. Deotis Roberts[1]
Rosemary Radford Ruether[1]
Letty M. Russell[1]
Academic work
DisciplineAmerican studies
InstitutionsGhana School of Law
Brandeis University
InfluencedPatricia Hill Collins
Marian Wright Edelman[2]
Ruth Bader Ginsburg[2]
Eleanor Holmes Norton[2]
Eleanor Roosevelt[2]

Born in Baltimore, Maryland, Murray was essentially orphaned and then raised mostly by her maternal aunt in Durham, North Carolina. At age 16, she moved to New York City to attend Hunter College, and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English in 1933. In 1940, Murray sat in the whites-only section of a Virginia bus with a friend, and they were arrested for violating state segregation laws.[3] This incident, and her subsequent involvement with the socialist Workers' Defense League, led her to pursue her career goal of working as a civil rights lawyer. She enrolled in the law school at Howard University, where she was the only woman in her class.[4] Murray graduated first in her class, but she was denied the chance to do post-graduate work at Harvard University because of her gender. She called such prejudice against women "Jane Crow", alluding to the Jim Crow laws that enforced racial segregation in the Southern United States. She earned a master's degree in law at University of California, Berkeley, and in 1965 she became the first African American to receive a Doctor of Juridical Science degree from Yale Law School.

As a lawyer, Murray argued for civil rights and women's rights. National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Chief Counsel Thurgood Marshall called Murray's 1950 book States' Laws on Race and Color, the "bible" of the civil rights movement.[5][6] Murray was appointed by President John F. Kennedy to serve on the 1961–1963 Presidential Commission on the Status of Women.[7] In 1966, she was a co-founder of the National Organization for Women. Ruth Bader Ginsburg named Murray as a coauthor of the ACLU brief in the landmark 1971 Supreme Court case Reed v. Reed, in recognition of her pioneering work on gender discrimination. This case articulated the "failure of the courts to recognize sex discrimination for what it is and its common features with other types of arbitrary discrimination."[7] Murray held faculty or administrative positions at the Ghana School of Law, Benedict College, and Brandeis University.

In 1973, Murray left academia for activities associated with the Episcopal Church. She became an ordained priest in 1977, among the first generation of women priests and the first African-American woman to be ordained as an Episcopal priest.[8][5] In addition to her legal and advocacy work, Murray published two well-reviewed autobiographies and a volume of poetry. Initially published in 1970, the poetry collection, Dark Testament, was reissued in 2018.

Murray's sexual and gender identity did not fit within the prevailing norms. She had a brief, annulled marriage to a man, and several deep relationships with women. In her younger years, she occasionally had passed as a teenage boy.[9] A number of scholars, including a 2017 biographer, have retroactively classified Murray as transgender.[5]

Early life edit

Murray was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on November 20, 1910.[10] Both sides of her family were of mixed racial origins, with ancestors including Black slaves, white slave owners, Native Americans, Irish, and free Black people. The varied features and complexions of her family were described as a "United Nations in miniature".[11] Murray's parents, schoolteacher William H. Murray and nurse Agnes (Fitzgerald) Murray, both identified as Black.[12] In 1914, Agnes died of a cerebral hemorrhage when her daughter was three.[13] After Murray's father began to have emotional problems, some think as a result of typhoid fever, relatives took custody of his children.

 
The house where Murray lived in Durham, North Carolina

Three-year-old Pauli Murray was sent to Durham, North Carolina, to live with her mother's family.[14] There, she was raised by her maternal aunts, Sarah (Sallie) Fitzgerald and Pauline Fitzgerald Dame (both teachers), as well as her maternal grandparents, Robert and Cornelia (Smith) Fitzgerald.[15] She attended St. Titus Episcopal Church with her mother's family, as had her mother before Murray was born.[16] When she was 12, her father was committed to the Crownsville State Hospital for the Negro Insane, where he received no meaningful treatment. Pauli had wanted to rescue him, but in 1923 (when she was 13), he was bludgeoned to death by a white guard with a baseball bat.[5]

Murray lived in Durham until the age of 16, at which point she moved to New York to finish high school and prepare for college.[17] There she lived with the family of her cousin Maude. The family was passing for white in their white neighborhood. Murray's presence discomfited Maude's neighbors, however, as Murray was more visibly of partial African descent.[18] She graduated with her second high school diploma and honors from Richmond Hill High School in 1927, and enrolled at Hunter College for two years.[19]

Murray married William Roy Wynn, known as Billy Wynn, in secret on November 30, 1930, but soon came to regret the decision.[20] The historian Rosalind Rosenberg wrote:

Their honeymoon weekend, spent in a "cheap West Side Hotel", was a disaster, an experience that she later attributed to their youth and poverty. The truth was more complicated. As Pauli explained in notes to herself a few years later, she had felt repelled by the act of sexual intercourse. Part of her had wanted to be a "normal" woman, but another part resisted. "Why is it when men try to make love to me, something in me fights?" she wondered.[21]

Murray and Wynn only spent a few months together before both leaving town.[21] They did not see one another again before Murray contacted him to have their marriage annulled on March 26, 1949.[22]

Inspired to attend Columbia University by a favorite teacher, Murray was turned away from applying because the university did not admit women, and she did not have the funds to attend its women's coordinate college, Barnard College.[23] Instead she attended Hunter College, a free women's college of City University of New York, where she was one of the few students of color.[24] Murray was encouraged in her writing by one of her English instructors, from whom she earned an "A" for an essay about her maternal grandfather. This became the basis of Murray's later memoir Proud Shoes (1956), about her mother's family. Murray published an article and several poems in the college paper. She graduated in 1933 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English.[23]

Murray further continued her education in New York City at Jay Lovestone's New Workers School on West 33rd Street, taking, in Rosenberg's words, "night classes with Lovestone and others ... including Marxist Philosophy, Historical Materialism, Marxian Economics, and Problems of Communist Organization."[25]

Jobs were difficult to find during the Great Depression. Murray took a job selling subscriptions to Opportunity, an academic journal of the National Urban League, a civil rights organization based in New York City. Poor health forced her to resign, and her doctor recommended that Murray seek a healthier environment.[26]

Murray took a position at Camp Tera, a "She-She-She" conservation camp. Established at the urging of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, these federally-funded camps paralleled the all-male Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camps formed under President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal to provide employment to young adults while improving national infrastructure.[27][28] During her three months at the camp, Murray's health recovered. She also met Eleanor Roosevelt. Later they had correspondence that affected both of them. Murray clashed with the camp's director, however. The director had found a Marxist book from a Hunter College course among Murray's belongings, and questioned Murray's attitude during the First Lady's visit. The camp director also disapproved of Murray's cross-racial relationship with Peg Holmes, a white counselor.[29] Murray and Holmes left the camp in February 1935, and began traveling the country by walking, hitchhiking, and hopping freight trains.[30]

Murray later worked for the Young Women's Christian Association.[31]

1938–1945: Early activism and law school edit

 
back, l to r, Albert M. Sacks, Pauli Murray, Mary Bunting; seated, l to r, Alma Lutz, suffragette [sic] and Harvard Law School Forum guest, and Betty Friedan

Murray applied to PhD program in sociology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, in 1938, but was rejected because of her race.[32] All schools and other public facilities in the state were segregated by state law, as was the case across the South.[23] The case was broadly publicized in both white and black newspapers. Murray wrote to officials ranging from the university president to President Roosevelt, releasing their responses to the media in an attempt to embarrass them into action. The NAACP initially was interested in the case, but later declined to represent her in court, perhaps fearing that her long residence in New York state weakened her case.[33] NAACP leader Roy Wilkins opposed representing her because Murray had already released her correspondence, which he considered "not diplomatic".[34] Concerns about her sexuality also may have played a role in the decision;[35] Murray often wore pants rather than the customary skirts of women and was open about her relationships with women.[36]

In early 1940, Murray was walking the streets in Rhode Island, distraught after "the disappearance of a woman friend". She was taken into custody by police.[37][a] She was transferred to Bellevue Hospital in New York City for psychiatric treatment.[37] In March, Murray left the hospital with Adelene McBean, her roommate and girlfriend,[38] and took a bus to Durham to visit her aunts.[citation needed]

In Petersburg, Virginia, the two women moved out of broken seats in the black (and back) section of the bus, where state segregation laws mandated they sit, and into the white section. Inspired by a conversation they had been having about Gandhian civil disobedience, the two women refused to return to the rear even after the police were called. They were arrested and jailed.[39] Murray and McBean initially were defended by the NAACP, but when the pair were convicted only of disorderly conduct rather than violating segregation laws, the organization ceased to represent them.[40] The Workers' Defense League (WDL), a socialist labor rights organization that also was beginning to take civil rights cases, paid her fine. A few months later the WDL hired Murray for its administrative committee.[41]

With the WDL, Murray became active in the case of Odell Waller, a black Virginia sharecropper sentenced to death for killing his white landlord, Oscar Davis, during an argument. The WDL argued that Davis had cheated Waller in a settlement and as their argument grew more heated, Waller had shot Davis in legitimate fear of his life.[42] Murray toured the country raising funds for Waller's appeal.[43] She wrote to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt on Waller's behalf.[44] Roosevelt in turn wrote to Virginia Governor Colgate Darden, asking him to guarantee that the trial was fair; she later persuaded the president to privately request Darden to commute the death sentence.[45] Through this correspondence, Murray and Eleanor Roosevelt began a friendship that would last until the latter's death two decades later.[46] Despite the efforts of the WDL and the Roosevelts, however, the governor did not commute Waller's sentence. Waller was executed on July 2, 1942.[47]

Howard and Berkeley edit

Murray's trial on charges stemming from the bus incident and her experience with the Waller case inspired a career in civil rights law.[48] In 1941, she began attending Howard University law school. Murray was the only woman in her law school class, and she became aware of sexism at the school, which she labeled "Jane Crow"—alluding to Jim Crow, the system of racial discriminatory state laws oppressing African Americans.[49] On Murray's first day of class, one professor, William Robert Ming, remarked that he did not know why women went to law school. She was infuriated.[50]

 
Howard University School of Law

In 1942, while still in law school, Murray joined the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). That year she published an article, "Negro Youth's Dilemma", that challenged segregation in the US military, which continued during the Second World War. She also participated in sit-ins challenging several Washington, DC, restaurants with discriminatory seating policies. These activities preceded the more widespread sit-ins during the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.[31]

Murray was elected chief justice of the Howard Court of Peers, the highest student position at Howard, and in 1944 she graduated first in her class.[51] Traditionally, Howard's top graduate received a Julius Rosenwald Fellowship for graduate work at Harvard University, but Harvard Law did not accept women at that time. Murray was thus rejected, despite a letter of support from sitting President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[31] Murray wrote in response, "I would gladly change my sex to meet your requirements, but since the way to such change has not been revealed to me, I have no recourse but to appeal to you to change your minds. Are you to tell me that one is as difficult as the other?"[52]

Excluded from Harvard, Murray undertook post-graduate work at the School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley.[31] Her master's degree thesis was entitled "The Right to Equal Opportunity in Employment", which argued that "the right to work is an inalienable right". It was published in Berkeley Law's flagship California Law Review.[53]

Professional career edit

After passing the California bar exam in 1945, Murray was hired as the state's first black deputy attorney general in January of the following year.[54] That year, the National Council of Negro Women named her its "Woman of the Year" and Mademoiselle magazine did the same in 1947.[6] In 1949, Murray was the unsuccessful Liberal Party candidate for a seat in the New York City Council from Brooklyn.[55] Murray was the first Black woman hired as an associate attorney at the Paul, Weiss law firm in New York City, working there from 1956 to 1960. Murray was the firm's second Black associate after Bill Coleman. She first met Ruth Bader Ginsburg at Paul, Weiss, when Ginsburg was briefly a summer associate there.[56]

Activism against racial and sex discrimination edit

Murray was an outspoken activist at the forefront of the civil rights movement, alongside such leaders as Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks. She coined the term Jane Crow, which demonstrated Murray's belief that Jim Crow laws also negatively affected African-American women. She was determined to work with other activists to put a halt to both racism and sexism. Murray's speech, "Jim Crow and Jane Crow", delivered in Washington, DC, in 1964, sheds light on the long struggle of African-American women for racial equality and their later fight for equality among the sexes. As she put it, "Not only have they stood ... with Negro men in every phase of the battle, but they have also continued to stand when their men were destroyed by it." The black women decided to "...continue ... [standing] ..." for their freedom and liberty even when "...their men ..." began to experience exhaustion from a long struggle for civil rights. These women were unafraid to stand up for what they believed in and refused to back down from the long and tedious "battle". Murray continued her praise for black women when she stated that "...one cannot help asking: would the Negro struggle have come this far without the indomitable determination of its women?" The "Negro struggle" was able to progress partly because of "...the indomitable determination of its women."[57]

In 1950, Murray published States' Laws on Race and Color, an examination and critique of state segregation laws throughout the nation. She drew on psychological and sociological evidence as well as legal, an innovative discussion technique for which she had previously been criticized by Howard professors. Murray argued for civil rights lawyers to challenge state segregation laws as unconstitutional directly, rather than trying to prove the inequality of so-called "separate but equal" facilities, as was argued in some challenges.[31] Thurgood Marshall, then NAACP chief counsel and a future supreme court justice, called Murray's book the "bible" of the civil rights movement.[6] Her approach was influential to the NAACP arguments in Brown v. Board of Education (1954), by which they drew from psychological studies assessing the effects of segregation on students in school. The US Supreme Court ruled that segregated public schools were unconstitutional.[58]

In 1961, US President John F. Kennedy appointed Murray to the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women. She prepared a memo entitled "A Proposal to Reexamine the Applicability of the Fourteenth Amendment to State Laws and Practices Which Discriminate on the Basis of Sex Per Se", which argued that the Fourteenth Amendment forbade sex discrimination as well as racial discrimination.[31]

In 1963, she became one of the first to criticize the sexism of the civil rights movement, in her speech "The Negro Woman in the Quest for Equality".[59] In a letter to civil rights leader A. Philip Randolph, she criticized the fact that in the 1963 March on Washington no women were invited to make one of the major speeches or to be part of its delegation of leaders who went to the White House, among other grievances. She wrote:

I have been increasingly perturbed over the blatant disparity between the major role which Negro women have played and are playing in the crucial grassroots levels of our struggle and the minor role of leadership they have been assigned in the national policy-making decisions. It is indefensible to call a national march on Washington and send out a call which contains the name of not a single woman leader.[60]

In 1964, Murray wrote an influential legal memorandum in support of the National Women's Party's successful effort (led by Alice Paul) to add "sex" as a protected category in the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[61] In 1965, Murray published her landmark article (coauthored by Mary Eastwood), "Jane Crow and the Law: Sex Discrimination and Title VII", in the George Washington Law Review. The article discussed Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as it applied to women, and drew comparisons between discriminatory laws against women and Jim Crow laws.[62] The memo was shared with every member of Congress and Lady Bird Johnson, then First Lady, who brought it to President Lyndon B. Johnson's attention.[56]

In 1966, she was a cofounder of the National Organization for Women (NOW), which she hoped could act as an NAACP for women's rights.[31] In March of that year, Murray wrote to Commissioner Richard Alton Graham that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission was not fulfilling its duty in upholding the gendered portion of its mission, leaving only half the black population protected.[63] Later in 1966, she and Dorothy Kenyon of the ACLU successfully argued White v. Crook, a case in which a three-judge court of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama ruled that women have an equal right to serve on juries.[64] When future Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, then with the ACLU, wrote her brief for Reed v. Reed, the 1971 Supreme Court case that extended the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause to women for the first time, she added Murray and Kenyon as coauthors in recognition of her debt to their work.[7]

Academia edit

Murray lived in Ghana from 1960 to 1961, serving on the faculty of the Ghana School of Law.[31] She returned to the US and studied at Yale Law School, in 1965 becoming the first African American to receive a Doctor of Juridical Science degree from the school.[65] Her dissertation was titled, "Roots of the Racial Crisis: Prologue to Policy".[66]

Murray served as vice president of Benedict College from 1967 to 1968. She left Benedict to become a professor at Brandeis University.[6] She taught at Brandeis from 1968 to 1973, receiving tenure in 1971 as a full professor in American studies and appointed as Louis Stulberg Chair in Law and Politics.[67] In addition to teaching law, Murray introduced classes on African-American studies and women's studies, both firsts for the university. Murray later wrote that her time at Brandeis was "the most exciting, tormenting, satisfying, embattled, frustrated, and at times triumphant period of my secular career".[68]

Priesthood edit

Increasingly inspired by her connections with other women in the Episcopal Church, Murray, then more than sixty years old, left Brandeis to attend General Theological Seminary, where she received a Master of Divinity in 1976 with her thesis, "Black Theology and Feminist Theology: A Comparative Review", spending the final year and a half of her course at Virginia Theological Seminary.[69][70][71][31] She was ordained to the diaconate in 1976[72] and, after three years of study, in 1977 she became the first African-American woman ordained as an Episcopal priest and was among the first generation of Episcopal women priests.[17] That year she celebrated her first Eucharist by invitation and preached her first sermon at Chapel of the Cross. That was the first time a woman celebrated the Eucharist at an Episcopal church in North Carolina. In 1978, she preached in her home town of Durham, North Carolina, on Mother's Day at St. Philip's Episcopal Church, where her mother and grandparents had attended in the 19th century. She announced her mission of reconciliation.[16] For the next seven years, Murray worked in a parish in Washington, DC, focusing particularly on ministry to the sick.[31]

 
An exhibit on Pauli Murray in front of the Murray family home

Death and legacy edit

On July 1, 1985, Pauli Murray died of pancreatic cancer in the house she owned with lifelong friend Maida Springer Kemp in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[6][73]

In 2012, the General Convention of the Episcopal Church voted to honor Murray as one of its Holy Women, Holy Men,[74] to be commemorated on July 1, the anniversary of her death, along with fellow writer Harriet Beecher Stowe.[75] Bishop Michael Curry of the Diocese of North Carolina said this recognition honors "people whose lives have exemplified what it means to follow in the footsteps of Jesus and make a difference in the world."[76]

In 2015, the National Trust for Historic Preservation designated the childhood home of Murray (on Carroll Street in Durham, North Carolina's West End neighborhood) as a National Treasure.[77]

In April 2016, Yale University announced that it had selected Murray as the namesake of one of two new residential colleges (Pauli Murray College) to be completed in 2017; the other was to be named after Benjamin Franklin.[78]

 
An exhibit on the religious life of Pauli Murray in front of the Murray family home in Durham, North Carolina

In December 2016, the Pauli Murray Family Home was designated as a National Historic Landmark by the US Department of Interior.[79]

In 2018, Murray was chosen by the National Women's History Project as one of its honorees for Women's History Month in the United States.[80]

Also in 2018, Murray was made a permanent part of the Episcopal Church's calendar of saints (she is commemorated on July 1). Thurgood Marshall and Florence Li Tim-Oi were also added permanently to the calendar.[81]

In January 2021, a biographical documentary entitled My Name Is Pauli Murray premiered at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival.[82][83]

Murray will be an honoree on an American Women quarter in 2024.[84]

Sexuality and gender identity edit

Murray struggled with her sexual and gender identity through much of her life. Her marriage as a teenager ended almost immediately with the realization that "when men try to make love to me, something in me fights".[85] Although acknowledging the term "homosexual" in describing others, Murray preferred to describe herself as having an "inverted sex instinct" that caused her to behave as a man would when attracted to women. She wanted a "monogamous married life", but one in which she was the man.[86] The majority of her relationships were with women whom she described as "extremely feminine and heterosexual". In her younger years, Murray often was devastated by the end of these relationships, to the extent that she was hospitalized for psychiatric treatment twice, in 1937 and in 1940.[9]

Murray wore her hair short and preferred pants to skirts; due to her slight build, there was a time in her life when she was often able to pass as a teenage boy.[85] In her twenties, she shortened her name from Pauline to the more androgynous Pauli.[87] At the time of her arrest for the bus segregation protest in 1940, she gave her name as "Oliver" to the arresting officers.[88] Murray pursued hormone treatments in the 1940s to correct what she saw as a personal imbalance[37] and even requested abdominal surgery to test if she had "submerged" male sex organs.[89]

Writing about Murray's understanding of her sex, Rosalind Rosenberg, author of Jane Crow: The Life of Pauli Murray, categorized Murray as a transgender man. When asked about her understanding of Murray's gender in a 2017 interview with the African American Intellectual History Society, Rosenberg states: "[During Pauli's life,] the term transgender did not exist and there was no social movement to support or help make sense of the trans experience. Murray's papers helped me to understand how her struggle with gender identity shaped her life as a civil rights pioneer, legal scholar, and feminist."[90] In an interview with HuffPost Queer Voices, Brittney Cooper agreed on the matter: "Murray preferred androgynous dress, had a short hairstyle and may have identified as a transgender male today, but she lacked the language to do so at the time."[88] While she lived openly in lesbian relationships for a time, her career, her Communist politics, and respectability politics shut down her options.[91][92]

Relationships edit

It has been said that Murray had just two significant romantic relationships in her life, both with white women. The first, in 1934, was brief. The second was with Irene "Renee" Barlow, an office manager at Paul, Weiss, where Murray worked as an associate attorney from 1956 to 1960. Murray's relationship with Barlow lasted nearly two decades. Barlow has been described by Murray's biographer as Pauli's "life partner", although the pair never lived in the same house and only occasionally lived in the same city. Due to Murray destroying Barlow's letters, a lot of the story is unknowable. However, while Barlow does not make an appearance in Murray's memoir, when Barlow was dying of a brain tumor, in 1973, she describes Pauli as "my closest friend".[93]

Pronouns edit

In an essay titled "Pauli Murray and the Pronominal Problem", transgender scholar-activist Naomi Simmons-Thorne lends support behind the emerging view of Murray as an early transgender figure in U.S. history.[94] In her essay, she calls upon historians and scholars to complement this growing interpretation through the use of masculine pronouns to reflect Murray's masculine perception of self. Simmons-Thorne is not the first academic to draw attention to the issue of Murray's pronouns, however. Historian Simon D. Elin Fisher has also challenged the historical and textual practices of assigning Murray female pronouns through his pronominal use of "s/he" in some of his writings.[95] Simmons-Thorne, however, makes exclusive use of "he-him-his" pronouns in reference to Murray. She conceives of the practice as one of many "de-essentialist" trans historiographical methods capable of "interrupt[ing] the logic of biological determinism" and "the constraints of cissexism operating historically."[94] Her view is a radical departure from biographers and scholars like Rosenberg, and conventional practices more broadly, which generally refer to Murray through the use of "she-her-hers" pronouns.[90]

Memoirs and poetry edit

In addition to her legal work, Murray wrote two volumes of autobiography and a collection of poetry. Her first autobiographical book, Proud Shoes (1956), traces her family's complicated racial origins, particularly focusing on her maternal grandparents, Robert and Cornelia Fitzgerald. Cornelia was the daughter of a slave who had been raped by her white owner and his brother. Born into slavery, the mixed-race girl was raised by her owner's sister and educated. Robert was a free black man from Pennsylvania, also of mixed racial ancestry; he moved to the South to teach during the Reconstruction Era. Newspapers, including The New York Times, gave the book very positive reviews. The New York Herald Tribune stated that Proud Shoes is "a personal memoir, it is history, it is biography, and it is also a story that, at its best, is dramatic enough to satisfy the demands of fiction. It is written in anger, but without hatred; in affection, but without pathos and tears; and in humor that never becomes extravagant."[96]

Murray published a collection of her poetry, Dark Testament and Other Poems, in 1970. The title poem, "Dark Testament", originally appeared in the winter 1944–45 issue of Lillian Smith and Paula Snelling's South Today. The volume contains what critic Christina G. Bucher calls a number of "conflicted love poems", as well as those exploring economic and racial injustice. The poem "Ruth" is included in the 1992 anthology Daughters of Africa.[97] Dark Testament has received little critical attention, and as of 2007, was out of print.[89] It was republished in 2018, following publication of a new biography about Murray in 2017.[5]

A follow-up volume to Proud Shoes, her memoir Song in a Weary Throat: An American Pilgrimage, was published posthumously in 1987. Song focused on Murray's own life, particularly her struggles with both gender and racial discrimination. It received the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award, the Christopher Award, and the Lillian Smith Book Award.[98]

Works by Murray edit

Law edit

  • Murray, Pauli (Editor) (1952) States' Laws on Race and Color (Studies in the Legal History of the South), Athens: University of Georgia Press, Reprint edition, 2016. ISBN 978-0-8203-5063-9
  • Murray, Pauli and Rubin, Leslie. The Constitution and Government of Ghana, London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1964. ISBN 978-0-421-04180-6, OCLC 491764185

Poetry edit

Autobiographies edit

  • Proud Shoes: The Story Of An American Family, New York: Harper & Brothers, 1956. ISBN 0-8070-7209-5.
  • Song in a Weary Throat: An American Pilgrimage, New York: Harper & Row, 1987. ISBN 0-06-015704-6. Reissued as Pauli Murray: The Autobiography of a Black Activist, Feminist, Lawyer, Priest and Poet, University of Tennessee Press, 1989. ISBN 0-87049-596-8

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kenneth W. Mack states that the woman friend in question was likely Peg Holmes.[37]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Pinn 1999, p. 29.
  2. ^ a b c d Mack, Kenneth W. (February 29, 2016). "Pauli Murray, Eleanor Roosevelt's Beloved Radical". Boston Review. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  3. ^ Cain, Brooke; Quillin, Martha (February 19, 2021). "10 NC Black History Lessons You Likely Weren't Taught in School (but Should Have Been)". Raleigh News & Observer. Retrieved February 27, 2021.
  4. ^ "Jane Crow & the Story of Pauli Murray". National Museum of African American History and Culture. March 24, 2021. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e Schulz, Kathryn (April 17, 2017). "The Many Lives of Pauli Murray". The New Yorker. Retrieved April 12, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d e Ahmed 2006.
  7. ^ a b c Kerber, Linda K. (August 1, 1993). "Judge Ginsburg's Gift". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 16, 2017.
  8. ^ "Dr. Pauli Murray, Episcopalian Priest". The New York Times. July 4, 1985. p. 12. Retrieved March 15, 2018.
  9. ^ a b Mack 2012, p. 214.
  10. ^ Sanchez 2003, p. 134.
  11. ^ Hightower-Langston 2002, p. 160; Mack 2012, pp. 208–209.
  12. ^ Bell-Scott 2016, p. 8; Mack 2012, p. 208; Sanchez 2003, p. 134.
  13. ^ Rosenberg 2017, p. 15.
  14. ^ Bell-Scott 2016, p. 8.
  15. ^ Bell-Scott 2016, pp. 8–9; Mack 2012, p. 209; Murray 1999, p. xv.
  16. ^ a b "The Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray and the Episcopal Church". Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  17. ^ a b Bucher 2007, p. 441.
  18. ^ Mack 2012, p. 209.
  19. ^ Bell-Scott 2016, p. 10.
  20. ^ Rosenberg 2017, pp. 37–38.
  21. ^ a b Rosenberg 2017, p. 38.
  22. ^ Bell-Scott 2016, p. 192; Rosenberg 2017, p. 38.
  23. ^ a b c McNeil, Genna Rae. "Interview with Pauli Murray, February 13, 1976. Interview G-0044. Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007)". Documenting the American South. from the original on January 10, 2012. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  24. ^ Hightower-Langston 2002, p. 160.
  25. ^ Rosenberg 2017, pp. 54–55.
  26. ^ Murray, Pauli; Bell-Scott, Patricia (May 8, 2018). "9". Song in a Weary Throat: Memoir of an American Pilgrimage. Boni & Liveright. ISBN 9781631494598.
  27. ^ . Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project. Archived from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  28. ^ Mack 2012, p. 213.
  29. ^ Bell-Scott 2016, p. 18.
  30. ^ Mack 2012, pp. 213–214.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Atwell 2002.
  32. ^ "Pauli Murray Hall: UNC's Departments of History, Political Science, and Sociology and the Curriculum on Peace, War, and Defense Begin the Renaming of Hamilton Hall". University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. July 28, 2020. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
  33. ^ Mack 2012, pp. 217–219.
  34. ^ Mack 2012, p. 218.
  35. ^ Mack 2012, pp. 218–219.
  36. ^ Mack 2012, pp. 214–216.
  37. ^ a b c d Mack 2012, p. 216.
  38. ^ Mack 2012, p. 217.
  39. ^ Mack 2012, pp. 221–222.
  40. ^ Mack 2012, p. 225.
  41. ^ Sherman 1992, p. 38.
  42. ^ Sherman 1992, p. 39.
  43. ^ Atwell 2002; Sherman 1992, p. 40.
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  45. ^ Goodwin 1994, p. 352.
  46. ^ Goodwin 1994, p. 354; Sherman 1992, p. 42.
  47. ^ Sherman 1992, p. 164.
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  49. ^ Guy-Sheftall 1995, p. 185.
  50. ^ Hightower-Langston 2002, p. 160; Mack 2012, p. 229.
  51. ^ Rosenberg 2017, pp. 4, 118.
  52. ^ Keller & Keller 2001, p. 58.
  53. ^ Azaransky 2011, p. 36.
  54. ^ Ahmed 2006; Atwell 2002.
  55. ^ "Miss Murray Delays Study at Harvard," by Ted Poston, New York Post, Oct. 26, 1949
  56. ^ a b Rosenbaum, Leah. "Meet the Forgotten Woman Who Forever Changed the Lives of LGBTQ+ Workers". Forbes. Retrieved December 8, 2020.
  57. ^ Lerner 1973, pp. 592–599.
  58. ^ "Brown v. Board of Education". National Archives. August 15, 2016. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
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  66. ^ Simon, Amanda (April 28, 2016). "New Residential College at Yale to Be Named after Former Ford Fellow". Ford Foundation. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
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  68. ^ Antler 2002.
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  70. ^ "Pauli Murray's Spiritual Journey". Emmanuel Episcopal Church. January 22, 2021. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
  71. ^ Boodman, Sandra G. (February 14, 1977). "The Poet as Lawyer and Priest". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
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  73. ^ . Harvard Library. Archived from the original on April 3, 2018. Retrieved March 16, 2018.
  74. ^ Holy Women, Holy Men: Celebrating the Saints – Additional Commemorations (PDF). New York: Church Publishing. September 2013. p. 5.
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  76. ^ Johnston, Flo (July 13, 2012). . The News & Observer. Raleigh, North Carolina. Archived from the original on July 15, 2012. Retrieved July 14, 2012.
  77. ^ Wise, Jim (March 26, 2015). "Durham's Pauli Murray Home Named 'National Treasure'". The News & Observer. Raleigh, North Carolina. Retrieved May 5, 2015.
  78. ^ Remnick, Noah (April 27, 2016). "Defying Protests, Yale Will Keep Name of a White Supremacist on a College". The New York Times. p. A19. Retrieved March 16, 2018.
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  81. ^ Frances, Mary (July 13, 2018). "Convention makes Thurgood Marshall, Pauli Murray, Florence Li Tim-Oi Permanent Saints of the Church". Episcopal News Service. Retrieved July 28, 2018.
  82. ^ Dry, Jude (February 2, 2021). "'My Name Is Pauli Murray' Review: Trailblazing Civil Rights Disruptor Gets Overdue Tribute". IndieWire. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  83. ^ Kennedy, Lisa (February 2, 2021). "'My Name Is Pauli Murray' Review: 'RBG' Directors Honor Another Civil Rights Leader". Variety. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  84. ^ "2024 American Women Quarters™ Program Honorees Announced". United States Mint. Retrieved February 2, 2023.
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  86. ^ Mack 2012, pp. 214–215.
  87. ^ Mack 2012, p. 212.
  88. ^ a b Gebreyes, Rahel (February 10, 2015). "How 'Respectablity Politics' Muted the Legacy of Black LGBT Activist Pauli Murray". The Huffington Post. Retrieved March 16, 2018.
  89. ^ a b Bucher 2007, p. 442.
  90. ^ a b Collins, Alyssa (October 16, 2017). "The Life of Pauli Murray: An Interview with Rosalind Rosenberg". Black Perspectives. African American Intellectual History Society.
  91. ^ Cooper, Brittney (February 18, 2015). "Black, Queer, Feminist, Erased from History: Meet the Most Important Legal Scholar You've Likely Never Heard Of". Salon. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  92. ^ Gebreyes, Rahel (February 10, 2015). "The Ahead-of-Her-Time Black LGBT Activist You Need to Know About". The Huffington Post. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  93. ^ Schulz, Kathryn (April 10, 2017). "The Civil-Rights Luminary You've Never Heard Of". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
  94. ^ a b Simmons-Thorne, Naomi (May 30, 2019). "Pauli Murray and the Pronominal Problem: A De-Essentialist Trans Historiography". The Activist History Review.
  95. ^ Fisher 2016.
  96. ^ Bucher 2007, pp. 441–442.
  97. ^ Busby, Margaret, ed. (1992). Daughters of Africa. p. 227.
  98. ^ Ahmed 2006; Bucher 2007, p. 442.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

Books edit

Articles edit

  • Crosby, Emilye (May 12, 2021). "Pauli Murray: A Personal and Political Life". The Sixties. 14: 104–106. doi:10.1080/17541328.2021.1923160. S2CID 235812349.
  • Garrett, Brianne; Rosenbaum, Leah (June 26, 2020). "Meet the Forgotten Woman Who Forever Changed the Lives of LGBTQ+ Workers". Forbes. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  • Lau, Barbara (April 17, 2017). "Defying Convention: The Life and Legacy of Pauli Murray" (PDF). The LGBT Bar. Retrieved February 20, 2021. (Five-page PDF with bibliography of books and articles by and about Murray)
  • Shulz, Kathryn (April 17, 2017). "The Many Lives of Pauli Murray". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 20, 2021.

External links edit

  • National Organization for Women: Finding Pauli Murray, Excellent links to Murray resources. Printable PDF.
  • Oral History Interview with Pauli Murray from Oral Histories of the American South at UNC-Chapel Hill, NC
  • by Orange County, NC
  • Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice in Durham, NC
  • Pauli Murray College at Yale University, New Haven, CT
  • Pauli Murray Papers at Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
  • Pauli Murray poetry (after bio) at the Poetry Foundation, Chicago, IL
  • The Pioneering Pauli Murray: Lawyer, Activist, Scholar and Priest, National Museum of African American History and Culture, Washington, DC
  • The Reverend Pauli Murray, 1910–1985, Archives of the Episcopal Church

pauli, murray, anna, pauline, pauli, murray, november, 1910, july, 1985, american, civil, rights, activist, advocate, legal, scholar, theorist, author, later, life, episcopal, priest, murray, work, influenced, civil, rights, movement, expanded, legal, protecti. Anna Pauline Pauli Murray November 20 1910 July 1 1985 was an American civil rights activist advocate legal scholar and theorist author and later in life an Episcopal priest Murray s work influenced the civil rights movement and expanded legal protection for gender equality The ReverendPauli MurrayPersonal detailsBornAnna Pauline Murray 1910 11 20 November 20 1910Baltimore Maryland U S DiedJuly 1 1985 1985 07 01 aged 74 Pittsburgh Pennsylvania U S PartnerRenee Barlow deceased 1973 SainthoodFeast day1 JulyVenerated inEpiscopal Church United States ChurchEpiscopal Church United States OrdersOrdination1976 deacon 1977 priest Personal detailsDenominationChristianity Anglican Academic backgroundEducationCity University of New York Hunter BA Howard University LLB University of California Berkeley LLM Yale University SJD General TheologicalSeminary MDiv InfluencesMary Daly 1 J Deotis Roberts 1 Rosemary Radford Ruether 1 Letty M Russell 1 Academic workDisciplineAmerican studiesInstitutionsGhana School of LawBrandeis UniversityInfluencedPatricia Hill CollinsMarian Wright Edelman 2 Ruth Bader Ginsburg 2 Eleanor Holmes Norton 2 Eleanor Roosevelt 2 Born in Baltimore Maryland Murray was essentially orphaned and then raised mostly by her maternal aunt in Durham North Carolina At age 16 she moved to New York City to attend Hunter College and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English in 1933 In 1940 Murray sat in the whites only section of a Virginia bus with a friend and they were arrested for violating state segregation laws 3 This incident and her subsequent involvement with the socialist Workers Defense League led her to pursue her career goal of working as a civil rights lawyer She enrolled in the law school at Howard University where she was the only woman in her class 4 Murray graduated first in her class but she was denied the chance to do post graduate work at Harvard University because of her gender She called such prejudice against women Jane Crow alluding to the Jim Crow laws that enforced racial segregation in the Southern United States She earned a master s degree in law at University of California Berkeley and in 1965 she became the first African American to receive a Doctor of Juridical Science degree from Yale Law School As a lawyer Murray argued for civil rights and women s rights National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP Chief Counsel Thurgood Marshall called Murray s 1950 book States Laws on Race and Color the bible of the civil rights movement 5 6 Murray was appointed by President John F Kennedy to serve on the 1961 1963 Presidential Commission on the Status of Women 7 In 1966 she was a co founder of the National Organization for Women Ruth Bader Ginsburg named Murray as a coauthor of the ACLU brief in the landmark 1971 Supreme Court case Reed v Reed in recognition of her pioneering work on gender discrimination This case articulated the failure of the courts to recognize sex discrimination for what it is and its common features with other types of arbitrary discrimination 7 Murray held faculty or administrative positions at the Ghana School of Law Benedict College and Brandeis University In 1973 Murray left academia for activities associated with the Episcopal Church She became an ordained priest in 1977 among the first generation of women priests and the first African American woman to be ordained as an Episcopal priest 8 5 In addition to her legal and advocacy work Murray published two well reviewed autobiographies and a volume of poetry Initially published in 1970 the poetry collection Dark Testament was reissued in 2018 Murray s sexual and gender identity did not fit within the prevailing norms She had a brief annulled marriage to a man and several deep relationships with women In her younger years she occasionally had passed as a teenage boy 9 A number of scholars including a 2017 biographer have retroactively classified Murray as transgender 5 Contents 1 Early life 2 1938 1945 Early activism and law school 2 1 Howard and Berkeley 3 Professional career 3 1 Activism against racial and sex discrimination 3 2 Academia 3 3 Priesthood 4 Death and legacy 5 Sexuality and gender identity 5 1 Relationships 5 2 Pronouns 6 Memoirs and poetry 7 Works by Murray 7 1 Law 7 2 Poetry 7 3 Autobiographies 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 10 Further reading 10 1 Books 10 2 Articles 11 External linksEarly life editMurray was born in Baltimore Maryland on November 20 1910 10 Both sides of her family were of mixed racial origins with ancestors including Black slaves white slave owners Native Americans Irish and free Black people The varied features and complexions of her family were described as a United Nations in miniature 11 Murray s parents schoolteacher William H Murray and nurse Agnes Fitzgerald Murray both identified as Black 12 In 1914 Agnes died of a cerebral hemorrhage when her daughter was three 13 After Murray s father began to have emotional problems some think as a result of typhoid fever relatives took custody of his children nbsp The house where Murray lived in Durham North CarolinaThree year old Pauli Murray was sent to Durham North Carolina to live with her mother s family 14 There she was raised by her maternal aunts Sarah Sallie Fitzgerald and Pauline Fitzgerald Dame both teachers as well as her maternal grandparents Robert and Cornelia Smith Fitzgerald 15 She attended St Titus Episcopal Church with her mother s family as had her mother before Murray was born 16 When she was 12 her father was committed to the Crownsville State Hospital for the Negro Insane where he received no meaningful treatment Pauli had wanted to rescue him but in 1923 when she was 13 he was bludgeoned to death by a white guard with a baseball bat 5 Murray lived in Durham until the age of 16 at which point she moved to New York to finish high school and prepare for college 17 There she lived with the family of her cousin Maude The family was passing for white in their white neighborhood Murray s presence discomfited Maude s neighbors however as Murray was more visibly of partial African descent 18 She graduated with her second high school diploma and honors from Richmond Hill High School in 1927 and enrolled at Hunter College for two years 19 Murray married William Roy Wynn known as Billy Wynn in secret on November 30 1930 but soon came to regret the decision 20 The historian Rosalind Rosenberg wrote Their honeymoon weekend spent in a cheap West Side Hotel was a disaster an experience that she later attributed to their youth and poverty The truth was more complicated As Pauli explained in notes to herself a few years later she had felt repelled by the act of sexual intercourse Part of her had wanted to be a normal woman but another part resisted Why is it when men try to make love to me something in me fights she wondered 21 Murray and Wynn only spent a few months together before both leaving town 21 They did not see one another again before Murray contacted him to have their marriage annulled on March 26 1949 22 Inspired to attend Columbia University by a favorite teacher Murray was turned away from applying because the university did not admit women and she did not have the funds to attend its women s coordinate college Barnard College 23 Instead she attended Hunter College a free women s college of City University of New York where she was one of the few students of color 24 Murray was encouraged in her writing by one of her English instructors from whom she earned an A for an essay about her maternal grandfather This became the basis of Murray s later memoir Proud Shoes 1956 about her mother s family Murray published an article and several poems in the college paper She graduated in 1933 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in English 23 Murray further continued her education in New York City at Jay Lovestone s New Workers School on West 33rd Street taking in Rosenberg s words night classes with Lovestone and others including Marxist Philosophy Historical Materialism Marxian Economics and Problems of Communist Organization 25 Jobs were difficult to find during the Great Depression Murray took a job selling subscriptions to Opportunity an academic journal of the National Urban League a civil rights organization based in New York City Poor health forced her to resign and her doctor recommended that Murray seek a healthier environment 26 Murray took a position at Camp Tera a She She She conservation camp Established at the urging of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt these federally funded camps paralleled the all male Civilian Conservation Corps CCC camps formed under President Franklin D Roosevelt s New Deal to provide employment to young adults while improving national infrastructure 27 28 During her three months at the camp Murray s health recovered She also met Eleanor Roosevelt Later they had correspondence that affected both of them Murray clashed with the camp s director however The director had found a Marxist book from a Hunter College course among Murray s belongings and questioned Murray s attitude during the First Lady s visit The camp director also disapproved of Murray s cross racial relationship with Peg Holmes a white counselor 29 Murray and Holmes left the camp in February 1935 and began traveling the country by walking hitchhiking and hopping freight trains 30 Murray later worked for the Young Women s Christian Association 31 1938 1945 Early activism and law school edit nbsp back l to r Albert M Sacks Pauli Murray Mary Bunting seated l to r Alma Lutz suffragette sic and Harvard Law School Forum guest and Betty FriedanMurray applied to PhD program in sociology at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill in 1938 but was rejected because of her race 32 All schools and other public facilities in the state were segregated by state law as was the case across the South 23 The case was broadly publicized in both white and black newspapers Murray wrote to officials ranging from the university president to President Roosevelt releasing their responses to the media in an attempt to embarrass them into action The NAACP initially was interested in the case but later declined to represent her in court perhaps fearing that her long residence in New York state weakened her case 33 NAACP leader Roy Wilkins opposed representing her because Murray had already released her correspondence which he considered not diplomatic 34 Concerns about her sexuality also may have played a role in the decision 35 Murray often wore pants rather than the customary skirts of women and was open about her relationships with women 36 In early 1940 Murray was walking the streets in Rhode Island distraught after the disappearance of a woman friend She was taken into custody by police 37 a She was transferred to Bellevue Hospital in New York City for psychiatric treatment 37 In March Murray left the hospital with Adelene McBean her roommate and girlfriend 38 and took a bus to Durham to visit her aunts citation needed In Petersburg Virginia the two women moved out of broken seats in the black and back section of the bus where state segregation laws mandated they sit and into the white section Inspired by a conversation they had been having about Gandhian civil disobedience the two women refused to return to the rear even after the police were called They were arrested and jailed 39 Murray and McBean initially were defended by the NAACP but when the pair were convicted only of disorderly conduct rather than violating segregation laws the organization ceased to represent them 40 The Workers Defense League WDL a socialist labor rights organization that also was beginning to take civil rights cases paid her fine A few months later the WDL hired Murray for its administrative committee 41 With the WDL Murray became active in the case of Odell Waller a black Virginia sharecropper sentenced to death for killing his white landlord Oscar Davis during an argument The WDL argued that Davis had cheated Waller in a settlement and as their argument grew more heated Waller had shot Davis in legitimate fear of his life 42 Murray toured the country raising funds for Waller s appeal 43 She wrote to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt on Waller s behalf 44 Roosevelt in turn wrote to Virginia Governor Colgate Darden asking him to guarantee that the trial was fair she later persuaded the president to privately request Darden to commute the death sentence 45 Through this correspondence Murray and Eleanor Roosevelt began a friendship that would last until the latter s death two decades later 46 Despite the efforts of the WDL and the Roosevelts however the governor did not commute Waller s sentence Waller was executed on July 2 1942 47 Howard and Berkeley edit Murray s trial on charges stemming from the bus incident and her experience with the Waller case inspired a career in civil rights law 48 In 1941 she began attending Howard University law school Murray was the only woman in her law school class and she became aware of sexism at the school which she labeled Jane Crow alluding to Jim Crow the system of racial discriminatory state laws oppressing African Americans 49 On Murray s first day of class one professor William Robert Ming remarked that he did not know why women went to law school She was infuriated 50 nbsp Howard University School of LawIn 1942 while still in law school Murray joined the Congress of Racial Equality CORE That year she published an article Negro Youth s Dilemma that challenged segregation in the US military which continued during the Second World War She also participated in sit ins challenging several Washington DC restaurants with discriminatory seating policies These activities preceded the more widespread sit ins during the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s 31 Murray was elected chief justice of the Howard Court of Peers the highest student position at Howard and in 1944 she graduated first in her class 51 Traditionally Howard s top graduate received a Julius Rosenwald Fellowship for graduate work at Harvard University but Harvard Law did not accept women at that time Murray was thus rejected despite a letter of support from sitting President Franklin D Roosevelt 31 Murray wrote in response I would gladly change my sex to meet your requirements but since the way to such change has not been revealed to me I have no recourse but to appeal to you to change your minds Are you to tell me that one is as difficult as the other 52 Excluded from Harvard Murray undertook post graduate work at the School of Law at the University of California Berkeley 31 Her master s degree thesis was entitled The Right to Equal Opportunity in Employment which argued that the right to work is an inalienable right It was published in Berkeley Law s flagship California Law Review 53 Professional career editAfter passing the California bar exam in 1945 Murray was hired as the state s first black deputy attorney general in January of the following year 54 That year the National Council of Negro Women named her its Woman of the Year and Mademoiselle magazine did the same in 1947 6 In 1949 Murray was the unsuccessful Liberal Party candidate for a seat in the New York City Council from Brooklyn 55 Murray was the first Black woman hired as an associate attorney at the Paul Weiss law firm in New York City working there from 1956 to 1960 Murray was the firm s second Black associate after Bill Coleman She first met Ruth Bader Ginsburg at Paul Weiss when Ginsburg was briefly a summer associate there 56 Activism against racial and sex discrimination edit Murray was an outspoken activist at the forefront of the civil rights movement alongside such leaders as Martin Luther King Jr and Rosa Parks She coined the term Jane Crow which demonstrated Murray s belief that Jim Crow laws also negatively affected African American women She was determined to work with other activists to put a halt to both racism and sexism Murray s speech Jim Crow and Jane Crow delivered in Washington DC in 1964 sheds light on the long struggle of African American women for racial equality and their later fight for equality among the sexes As she put it Not only have they stood with Negro men in every phase of the battle but they have also continued to stand when their men were destroyed by it The black women decided to continue standing for their freedom and liberty even when their men began to experience exhaustion from a long struggle for civil rights These women were unafraid to stand up for what they believed in and refused to back down from the long and tedious battle Murray continued her praise for black women when she stated that one cannot help asking would the Negro struggle have come this far without the indomitable determination of its women The Negro struggle was able to progress partly because of the indomitable determination of its women 57 In 1950 Murray published States Laws on Race and Color an examination and critique of state segregation laws throughout the nation She drew on psychological and sociological evidence as well as legal an innovative discussion technique for which she had previously been criticized by Howard professors Murray argued for civil rights lawyers to challenge state segregation laws as unconstitutional directly rather than trying to prove the inequality of so called separate but equal facilities as was argued in some challenges 31 Thurgood Marshall then NAACP chief counsel and a future supreme court justice called Murray s book the bible of the civil rights movement 6 Her approach was influential to the NAACP arguments in Brown v Board of Education 1954 by which they drew from psychological studies assessing the effects of segregation on students in school The US Supreme Court ruled that segregated public schools were unconstitutional 58 In 1961 US President John F Kennedy appointed Murray to the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women She prepared a memo entitled A Proposal to Reexamine the Applicability of the Fourteenth Amendment to State Laws and Practices Which Discriminate on the Basis of Sex Per Se which argued that the Fourteenth Amendment forbade sex discrimination as well as racial discrimination 31 In 1963 she became one of the first to criticize the sexism of the civil rights movement in her speech The Negro Woman in the Quest for Equality 59 In a letter to civil rights leader A Philip Randolph she criticized the fact that in the 1963 March on Washington no women were invited to make one of the major speeches or to be part of its delegation of leaders who went to the White House among other grievances She wrote I have been increasingly perturbed over the blatant disparity between the major role which Negro women have played and are playing in the crucial grassroots levels of our struggle and the minor role of leadership they have been assigned in the national policy making decisions It is indefensible to call a national march on Washington and send out a call which contains the name of not a single woman leader 60 In 1964 Murray wrote an influential legal memorandum in support of the National Women s Party s successful effort led by Alice Paul to add sex as a protected category in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 61 In 1965 Murray published her landmark article coauthored by Mary Eastwood Jane Crow and the Law Sex Discrimination and Title VII in the George Washington Law Review The article discussed Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as it applied to women and drew comparisons between discriminatory laws against women and Jim Crow laws 62 The memo was shared with every member of Congress and Lady Bird Johnson then First Lady who brought it to President Lyndon B Johnson s attention 56 In 1966 she was a cofounder of the National Organization for Women NOW which she hoped could act as an NAACP for women s rights 31 In March of that year Murray wrote to Commissioner Richard Alton Graham that the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission was not fulfilling its duty in upholding the gendered portion of its mission leaving only half the black population protected 63 Later in 1966 she and Dorothy Kenyon of the ACLU successfully argued White v Crook a case in which a three judge court of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama ruled that women have an equal right to serve on juries 64 When future Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg then with the ACLU wrote her brief for Reed v Reed the 1971 Supreme Court case that extended the Fourteenth Amendment s Equal Protection Clause to women for the first time she added Murray and Kenyon as coauthors in recognition of her debt to their work 7 Academia edit Murray lived in Ghana from 1960 to 1961 serving on the faculty of the Ghana School of Law 31 She returned to the US and studied at Yale Law School in 1965 becoming the first African American to receive a Doctor of Juridical Science degree from the school 65 Her dissertation was titled Roots of the Racial Crisis Prologue to Policy 66 Murray served as vice president of Benedict College from 1967 to 1968 She left Benedict to become a professor at Brandeis University 6 She taught at Brandeis from 1968 to 1973 receiving tenure in 1971 as a full professor in American studies and appointed as Louis Stulberg Chair in Law and Politics 67 In addition to teaching law Murray introduced classes on African American studies and women s studies both firsts for the university Murray later wrote that her time at Brandeis was the most exciting tormenting satisfying embattled frustrated and at times triumphant period of my secular career 68 Priesthood edit Increasingly inspired by her connections with other women in the Episcopal Church Murray then more than sixty years old left Brandeis to attend General Theological Seminary where she received a Master of Divinity in 1976 with her thesis Black Theology and Feminist Theology A Comparative Review spending the final year and a half of her course at Virginia Theological Seminary 69 70 71 31 She was ordained to the diaconate in 1976 72 and after three years of study in 1977 she became the first African American woman ordained as an Episcopal priest and was among the first generation of Episcopal women priests 17 That year she celebrated her first Eucharist by invitation and preached her first sermon at Chapel of the Cross That was the first time a woman celebrated the Eucharist at an Episcopal church in North Carolina In 1978 she preached in her home town of Durham North Carolina on Mother s Day at St Philip s Episcopal Church where her mother and grandparents had attended in the 19th century She announced her mission of reconciliation 16 For the next seven years Murray worked in a parish in Washington DC focusing particularly on ministry to the sick 31 nbsp An exhibit on Pauli Murray in front of the Murray family homeDeath and legacy editOn July 1 1985 Pauli Murray died of pancreatic cancer in the house she owned with lifelong friend Maida Springer Kemp in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 6 73 In 2012 the General Convention of the Episcopal Church voted to honor Murray as one of its Holy Women Holy Men 74 to be commemorated on July 1 the anniversary of her death along with fellow writer Harriet Beecher Stowe 75 Bishop Michael Curry of the Diocese of North Carolina said this recognition honors people whose lives have exemplified what it means to follow in the footsteps of Jesus and make a difference in the world 76 In 2015 the National Trust for Historic Preservation designated the childhood home of Murray on Carroll Street in Durham North Carolina s West End neighborhood as a National Treasure 77 In April 2016 Yale University announced that it had selected Murray as the namesake of one of two new residential colleges Pauli Murray College to be completed in 2017 the other was to be named after Benjamin Franklin 78 nbsp An exhibit on the religious life of Pauli Murray in front of the Murray family home in Durham North CarolinaIn December 2016 the Pauli Murray Family Home was designated as a National Historic Landmark by the US Department of Interior 79 In 2018 Murray was chosen by the National Women s History Project as one of its honorees for Women s History Month in the United States 80 Also in 2018 Murray was made a permanent part of the Episcopal Church s calendar of saints she is commemorated on July 1 Thurgood Marshall and Florence Li Tim Oi were also added permanently to the calendar 81 In January 2021 a biographical documentary entitled My Name Is Pauli Murray premiered at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival 82 83 Murray will be an honoree on an American Women quarter in 2024 84 Sexuality and gender identity editMurray struggled with her sexual and gender identity through much of her life Her marriage as a teenager ended almost immediately with the realization that when men try to make love to me something in me fights 85 Although acknowledging the term homosexual in describing others Murray preferred to describe herself as having an inverted sex instinct that caused her to behave as a man would when attracted to women She wanted a monogamous married life but one in which she was the man 86 The majority of her relationships were with women whom she described as extremely feminine and heterosexual In her younger years Murray often was devastated by the end of these relationships to the extent that she was hospitalized for psychiatric treatment twice in 1937 and in 1940 9 Murray wore her hair short and preferred pants to skirts due to her slight build there was a time in her life when she was often able to pass as a teenage boy 85 In her twenties she shortened her name from Pauline to the more androgynous Pauli 87 At the time of her arrest for the bus segregation protest in 1940 she gave her name as Oliver to the arresting officers 88 Murray pursued hormone treatments in the 1940s to correct what she saw as a personal imbalance 37 and even requested abdominal surgery to test if she had submerged male sex organs 89 Writing about Murray s understanding of her sex Rosalind Rosenberg author of Jane Crow The Life of Pauli Murray categorized Murray as a transgender man When asked about her understanding of Murray s gender in a 2017 interview with the African American Intellectual History Society Rosenberg states During Pauli s life the term transgender did not exist and there was no social movement to support or help make sense of the trans experience Murray s papers helped me to understand how her struggle with gender identity shaped her life as a civil rights pioneer legal scholar and feminist 90 In an interview with HuffPost Queer Voices Brittney Cooper agreed on the matter Murray preferred androgynous dress had a short hairstyle and may have identified as a transgender male today but she lacked the language to do so at the time 88 While she lived openly in lesbian relationships for a time her career her Communist politics and respectability politics shut down her options 91 92 Relationships edit It has been said that Murray had just two significant romantic relationships in her life both with white women The first in 1934 was brief The second was with Irene Renee Barlow an office manager at Paul Weiss where Murray worked as an associate attorney from 1956 to 1960 Murray s relationship with Barlow lasted nearly two decades Barlow has been described by Murray s biographer as Pauli s life partner although the pair never lived in the same house and only occasionally lived in the same city Due to Murray destroying Barlow s letters a lot of the story is unknowable However while Barlow does not make an appearance in Murray s memoir when Barlow was dying of a brain tumor in 1973 she describes Pauli as my closest friend 93 Pronouns edit In an essay titled Pauli Murray and the Pronominal Problem transgender scholar activist Naomi Simmons Thorne lends support behind the emerging view of Murray as an early transgender figure in U S history 94 In her essay she calls upon historians and scholars to complement this growing interpretation through the use of masculine pronouns to reflect Murray s masculine perception of self Simmons Thorne is not the first academic to draw attention to the issue of Murray s pronouns however Historian Simon D Elin Fisher has also challenged the historical and textual practices of assigning Murray female pronouns through his pronominal use of s he in some of his writings 95 Simmons Thorne however makes exclusive use of he him his pronouns in reference to Murray She conceives of the practice as one of many de essentialist trans historiographical methods capable of interrupt ing the logic of biological determinism and the constraints of cissexism operating historically 94 Her view is a radical departure from biographers and scholars like Rosenberg and conventional practices more broadly which generally refer to Murray through the use of she her hers pronouns 90 Memoirs and poetry editIn addition to her legal work Murray wrote two volumes of autobiography and a collection of poetry Her first autobiographical book Proud Shoes 1956 traces her family s complicated racial origins particularly focusing on her maternal grandparents Robert and Cornelia Fitzgerald Cornelia was the daughter of a slave who had been raped by her white owner and his brother Born into slavery the mixed race girl was raised by her owner s sister and educated Robert was a free black man from Pennsylvania also of mixed racial ancestry he moved to the South to teach during the Reconstruction Era Newspapers including The New York Times gave the book very positive reviews The New York Herald Tribune stated that Proud Shoes is a personal memoir it is history it is biography and it is also a story that at its best is dramatic enough to satisfy the demands of fiction It is written in anger but without hatred in affection but without pathos and tears and in humor that never becomes extravagant 96 Murray published a collection of her poetry Dark Testament and Other Poems in 1970 The title poem Dark Testament originally appeared in the winter 1944 45 issue of Lillian Smith and Paula Snelling s South Today The volume contains what critic Christina G Bucher calls a number of conflicted love poems as well as those exploring economic and racial injustice The poem Ruth is included in the 1992 anthology Daughters of Africa 97 Dark Testament has received little critical attention and as of 2007 was out of print 89 It was republished in 2018 following publication of a new biography about Murray in 2017 5 A follow up volume to Proud Shoes her memoir Song in a Weary Throat An American Pilgrimage was published posthumously in 1987 Song focused on Murray s own life particularly her struggles with both gender and racial discrimination It received the Robert F Kennedy Book Award the Christopher Award and the Lillian Smith Book Award 98 Works by Murray editLaw edit Murray Pauli Editor 1952 States Laws on Race and Color Studies in the Legal History of the South Athens University of Georgia Press Reprint edition 2016 ISBN 978 0 8203 5063 9 Murray Pauli and Rubin Leslie The Constitution and Government of Ghana London Sweet amp Maxwell 1964 ISBN 978 0 421 04180 6 OCLC 491764185Poetry edit Dark Testament and Other Poems Connecticut Silvermine Publishers 1970 ISBN 978 0 87321 016 4Autobiographies edit Proud Shoes The Story Of An American Family New York Harper amp Brothers 1956 ISBN 0 8070 7209 5 Song in a Weary Throat An American Pilgrimage New York Harper amp Row 1987 ISBN 0 06 015704 6 Reissued as Pauli Murray The Autobiography of a Black Activist Feminist Lawyer Priest and Poet University of Tennessee Press 1989 ISBN 0 87049 596 8Notes edit Kenneth W Mack states that the woman friend in question was likely Peg Holmes 37 References edit a b c d Pinn 1999 p 29 a b c d Mack Kenneth W February 29 2016 Pauli Murray Eleanor Roosevelt s Beloved Radical Boston Review Retrieved February 9 2019 Cain Brooke Quillin Martha February 19 2021 10 NC Black History Lessons You Likely Weren t Taught in School but Should Have Been Raleigh News amp Observer Retrieved February 27 2021 Jane Crow amp the Story of Pauli Murray National Museum of African American History and Culture March 24 2021 Retrieved July 26 2021 a b c d e Schulz Kathryn April 17 2017 The Many Lives of Pauli Murray The New Yorker Retrieved April 12 2017 a b c d e Ahmed 2006 a b c Kerber Linda K August 1 1993 Judge Ginsburg s Gift The Washington Post Retrieved April 16 2017 Dr Pauli Murray Episcopalian Priest The New York Times July 4 1985 p 12 Retrieved March 15 2018 a b Mack 2012 p 214 Sanchez 2003 p 134 Hightower Langston 2002 p 160 Mack 2012 pp 208 209 Bell Scott 2016 p 8 Mack 2012 p 208 Sanchez 2003 p 134 Rosenberg 2017 p 15 Bell Scott 2016 p 8 Bell Scott 2016 pp 8 9 Mack 2012 p 209 Murray 1999 p xv a b The Rev Dr Pauli Murray and the Episcopal Church Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina Retrieved February 13 2021 a b Bucher 2007 p 441 Mack 2012 p 209 Bell Scott 2016 p 10 Rosenberg 2017 pp 37 38 a b Rosenberg 2017 p 38 Bell Scott 2016 p 192 Rosenberg 2017 p 38 a b c McNeil Genna Rae Interview with Pauli Murray February 13 1976 Interview G 0044 Southern Oral History Program Collection 4007 Documenting the American South Archived from the original on January 10 2012 Retrieved January 12 2013 Hightower Langston 2002 p 160 Rosenberg 2017 pp 54 55 Murray Pauli Bell Scott Patricia May 8 2018 9 Song in a Weary Throat Memoir of an American Pilgrimage Boni amp Liveright ISBN 9781631494598 She She She Camps Eleanor Roosevelt Papers Project Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved January 12 2013 Mack 2012 p 213 Bell Scott 2016 p 18 Mack 2012 pp 213 214 a b c d e f g h i j Atwell 2002 Pauli Murray Hall UNC s Departments of History Political Science and Sociology and the Curriculum on Peace War and Defense Begin the Renaming of Hamilton Hall University of North Carolina Chapel Hill July 28 2020 Retrieved August 29 2021 Mack 2012 pp 217 219 Mack 2012 p 218 Mack 2012 pp 218 219 Mack 2012 pp 214 216 a b c d Mack 2012 p 216 Mack 2012 p 217 Mack 2012 pp 221 222 Mack 2012 p 225 Sherman 1992 p 38 Sherman 1992 p 39 Atwell 2002 Sherman 1992 p 40 Sherman 1992 p 42 Goodwin 1994 p 352 Goodwin 1994 p 354 Sherman 1992 p 42 Sherman 1992 p 164 Mack 2012 p 226 Guy Sheftall 1995 p 185 Hightower Langston 2002 p 160 Mack 2012 p 229 Rosenberg 2017 pp 4 118 Keller amp Keller 2001 p 58 Azaransky 2011 p 36 Ahmed 2006 Atwell 2002 Miss Murray Delays Study at Harvard by Ted Poston New York Post Oct 26 1949 a b Rosenbaum Leah Meet the Forgotten Woman Who Forever Changed the Lives of LGBTQ Workers Forbes Retrieved December 8 2020 Lerner 1973 pp 592 599 Brown v Board of Education National Archives August 15 2016 Retrieved February 2 2023 Collier Thomas 2010 p 493 Cole amp Guy Sheftall 2009 p 89 Freeman Jo March 1991 How Sex Got into Title VII Persistent Opportunism as a Maker of Public Policy Law and Inequality 9 2 163 184 Anderson 2004 pp 101 102 Hartmann 2002 White v Crook Justia Retrieved November 16 2021 Ahmed 2006 Azaransky 2011 p 59 Simon Amanda April 28 2016 New Residential College at Yale to Be Named after Former Ford Fellow Ford Foundation Retrieved August 29 2021 Antler 2002 pp 78 80 Antler 2002 Armentrout Don S Slocum Robert Boak January 2000 An Episcopal Dictionary of the Church Murray Pauli Episcopal Church Retrieved August 29 2021 Pauli Murray s Spiritual Journey Emmanuel Episcopal Church January 22 2021 Retrieved August 29 2021 Boodman Sandra G February 14 1977 The Poet as Lawyer and Priest The Washington Post Retrieved August 29 2021 Rosenberg 2017 p 371 Papers of Pauli Murray 1827 1985 A Finding Aid Harvard Library Archived from the original on April 3 2018 Retrieved March 16 2018 Holy Women Holy Men Celebrating the Saints Additional Commemorations PDF New York Church Publishing September 2013 p 5 News Coverage Read about the July Celebration of Rev Dr Pauli Murray at St Titus Episcopal Church Pauli Murray Project July 1 2013 Archived from the original on March 17 2015 Retrieved May 5 2015 Johnston Flo July 13 2012 Durham s Pauli Murray to Be Named Episcopal Saint The News amp Observer Raleigh North Carolina Archived from the original on July 15 2012 Retrieved July 14 2012 Wise Jim March 26 2015 Durham s Pauli Murray Home Named National Treasure The News amp Observer Raleigh North Carolina Retrieved May 5 2015 Remnick Noah April 27 2016 Defying Protests Yale Will Keep Name of a White Supremacist on a College The New York Times p A19 Retrieved March 16 2018 Vaughan Dawn Baumgartner June 13 2017 Pauli Murray s Landmark House to Become More Accessible The Harold Sun Durham North Carolina The McClatchy Company Retrieved March 16 2018 Lord Debbie February 24 2018 National Women s History Month What Is It When Did It Begin Who Is Being Honored This Year KIRO 7 Seattle Washington Cox Media Group Retrieved March 16 2018 Frances Mary July 13 2018 Convention makes Thurgood Marshall Pauli Murray Florence Li Tim Oi Permanent Saints of the Church Episcopal News Service Retrieved July 28 2018 Dry Jude February 2 2021 My Name Is Pauli Murray Review Trailblazing Civil Rights Disruptor Gets Overdue Tribute IndieWire Retrieved February 3 2021 Kennedy Lisa February 2 2021 My Name Is Pauli Murray Review RBG Directors Honor Another Civil Rights Leader Variety Retrieved February 3 2021 2024 American Women Quarters Program Honorees Announced United States Mint Retrieved February 2 2023 a b Mack 2012 p 211 Mack 2012 pp 214 215 Mack 2012 p 212 a b Gebreyes Rahel February 10 2015 How Respectablity Politics Muted the Legacy of Black LGBT Activist Pauli Murray The Huffington Post Retrieved March 16 2018 a b Bucher 2007 p 442 a b Collins Alyssa October 16 2017 The Life of Pauli Murray An Interview with Rosalind Rosenberg Black Perspectives African American Intellectual History Society Cooper Brittney February 18 2015 Black Queer Feminist Erased from History Meet the Most Important Legal Scholar You ve Likely Never Heard Of Salon Retrieved February 21 2021 Gebreyes Rahel February 10 2015 The Ahead of Her Time Black LGBT Activist You Need to Know About The Huffington Post Retrieved February 21 2021 Schulz Kathryn April 10 2017 The Civil Rights Luminary You ve Never Heard Of The New Yorker Retrieved February 21 2021 a b Simmons Thorne Naomi May 30 2019 Pauli Murray and the Pronominal Problem A De Essentialist Trans Historiography The Activist History Review Fisher 2016 Bucher 2007 pp 441 442 Busby Margaret ed 1992 Daughters of Africa p 227 Ahmed 2006 Bucher 2007 p 442 Bibliography edit Ahmed Siraj 2006 Murray Pauli In Palmer Colin A ed Encyclopedia of African American Culture and History Vol 4 Thomson Gale pp 1510 1511 ISBN 0 02 865820 5 Anderson Terry H 2004 The Pursuit of Fairness A History of Affirmative Action New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518245 3 Antler Joyce 2002 Pauli Murray The Brandeis Years Journal of Women s History 14 2 78 82 doi 10 1353 jowh 2002 0034 ISSN 1527 2036 S2CID 144692960 Atwell Mary Welek 2002 Murray Pauli 1910 1985 Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Gale Research Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved January 14 2013 via HighBeam Research Azaransky Sarah 2011 The Dream Is Freedom Pauli Murray and American Democratic Faith New York Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199744817 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 974481 7 Bell Scott Patricia 2016 The Firebrand and the First Lady Portrait of a Friendship Pauli Murray Eleanor Roosevelt and the Struggle for Social Justice New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 679 44652 1 Bucher Christina G 2007 Pauli Murray 1910 1985 In Williams Page Yolanda ed Encyclopedia of African American Women Writers Vol 2 Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group pp 441 443 ISBN 978 0 313 34124 3 Cole Johnnetta Betsch Guy Sheftall Beverly 2009 Gender Talk The Struggle For Women s Equality in African American Communities New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 307 52768 4 Collier Thomas Bettye 2010 Jesus Jobs and Justice African American Women and Religion New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 1 4000 4420 7 OL 24547298M Fisher Simon D Elin 2016 Pauli Murray s Peter Panic Perspectives from the Margins of Gender and Race in Jim Crow America Transgender Studies Quarterly 3 1 2 95 103 doi 10 1215 23289252 3334259 ISSN 2328 9260 Retrieved December 26 2019 Goodwin Doris Kearns 1994 No Ordinary Time Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt The Home Front in World War II New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 80448 4 Guy Sheftall Beverly 1995 Words of Fire An Anthology of African American Feminist Thought New York The New Press ISBN 978 1 56584 256 4 Hartmann Susan 2002 Pauli Murray and the Juncture of Women s Liberation and Black Liberation Journal of Women s History 14 2 74 77 doi 10 1353 jowh 2002 0044 ISSN 1527 2036 S2CID 144549099 Hightower Langston Donna 2002 A to Z of American Women Leaders and Activists New York Facts on File ISBN 978 1 4381 0792 9 Keller Morton Keller Phyllis 2001 Making Harvard Modern The Rise of America s University New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 514457 4 Lerner Gerda 1973 Black Women in White America 2nd ed New York Random House Mack Kenneth W 2012 Representing the Race The Creation of the Civil Rights Lawyer Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 04687 0 Murray Pauli 1999 1956 Proud Shoes The Story of an American Family Boston Massachusetts Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 7209 7 Pinn Anthony B 1999 Religion and America s Problem Child Notes on Pauli Murray s Theological Development Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 15 1 21 39 ISSN 1553 3913 JSTOR 25002350 Rosenberg Rosalind 2017 Jane Crow The Life of Pauli Murray New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 065645 4 Sanchez Brenna 2003 Murray Pauli 1910 1985 In Henderson Ashyia N ed Contemporary Black Biography Vol 38 Detroit Michigan Gale published 2007 pp 134 137 ISBN 978 1 4144 3566 4 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved January 12 2013 via Encyclopedia com Sherman Richard B 1992 The Case of Odell Waller and Virginia Justice 1940 1942 Knoxville Tennessee University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 0 87049 733 9 Further reading editBooks edit Cooper Brittney C 2017 Beyond Respectability The Intellectual Thought of Race Women Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 09954 0 Drury Maureen M 2012 Love Ambition and Invisible Footnotes in the Life and Writings of Pauli Murray In McGlotten Shaka Davis Dana Ain eds Black Genders and Sexualities New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 69 84 doi 10 1057 9781137077950 5 ISBN 978 1 137 07795 0 S2CID 143453655 Hardison Ayesha K 2014 Writing through Jane Crow Race and Gender Politics in African American Literature Charlottesville Virginia University of Virginia Press pp i vi ISBN 978 0 8139 3592 8 JSTOR j ctt6wrn9t 1 Kujawa Holbrook Sheryl A ed 2002 Anna Pauline Pauli Murray 1911 1985 Freedom Is a Dream A Documentary History of Women in The Episcopal Church New York Church Publishing pp 272 279 Pinn Anthony B ed 2006 Pauli Murray Selected Sermons and Writings Maryknoll New York Orbis Books ISBN 978 0 87049 596 0 Scott Anne Firor ed 2006 Pauli Murray and Caroline Ware Forty Years of Letters in Black and White University of North Carolina Press doi 10 5149 9780807876732 scott ISBN 978 0 8078 3055 0 JSTOR 10 5149 9780807876732 scott Articles edit Crosby Emilye May 12 2021 Pauli Murray A Personal and Political Life The Sixties 14 104 106 doi 10 1080 17541328 2021 1923160 S2CID 235812349 Garrett Brianne Rosenbaum Leah June 26 2020 Meet the Forgotten Woman Who Forever Changed the Lives of LGBTQ Workers Forbes Retrieved February 20 2021 Lau Barbara April 17 2017 Defying Convention The Life and Legacy of Pauli Murray PDF The LGBT Bar Retrieved February 20 2021 Five page PDF with bibliography of books and articles by and about Murray Shulz Kathryn April 17 2017 The Many Lives of Pauli Murray The New Yorker Retrieved February 20 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Pauli Murray National Organization for Women Finding Pauli Murray Excellent links to Murray resources Printable PDF Oral History Interview with Pauli Murray from Oral Histories of the American South at UNC Chapel Hill NC Pauli Murray Award by Orange County NC Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice in Durham NC Pauli Murray College at Yale University New Haven CT Pauli Murray Papers at Schlesinger Library Radcliffe Institute Harvard University Cambridge MA Pauli Murray poetry after bio at the Poetry Foundation Chicago IL The Pioneering Pauli Murray Lawyer Activist Scholar and Priest National Museum of African American History and Culture Washington DC The Reverend Pauli Murray 1910 1985 Archives of the Episcopal Church Portals nbsp United States nbsp Christianity nbsp Biography nbsp Civil rights movement nbsp Feminism nbsp Law nbsp LGBT Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pauli Murray amp oldid 1207445423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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