Rosina Tucker | |
---|---|
Born | Rosina Budd Harvey 4 November 1881 |
Died | 3 March 1987 105) | (aged
Nationality | American |
Other names | Rosina Corrothers |
Occupation(s) | labor organizer, civil rights activist, educator |
Spouse(s) | James D. Corrothers Berthea J. Tucker |
Rosina Tucker (4 November 1881 - 3 March 1987) was an American labor organizer, civil rights activist, and educator. She is best known for helping to organize the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first African-American trade union. At the age of one hundred, Tucker narrated a documentary about the union, Miles of Smiles, Years of Struggle .
Rosina Budd Harvey was born in Northwest Washington, D.C., on November 4, 1881. She was one of nine children of Lee Roy and Henrietta Harvey, both former slaves from Virginia. Her father, who worked as a shoemaker, taught himself to read and write and fostered a love of books in his children. In 1897 Rosina Harvey was visiting an aunt in Yonkers, New York, when she met the poet James D. Corrothers, who was a guest minister there. She married Corrothers on December 2, 1899. The couple had a son, Henry Harvey Corrothers, and raised Corrothers' other son from a previous marriage. Following the death of her husband in 1917, she moved back to Washington, D.C., where she worked for the federal government as a file clerk. She married her second husband Berthea "B.J." Tucker, a Pullman porter, on November 27, 1918. [1]
The porters' union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, launched in 1925 with A. Philip Randolph as president. B.J. Tucker joined immediately, and he and Rosina began organizing in Washington. The porters worked long hours, and had little time for union activities. Many also feared that they would lose their jobs if their employers learned of their union involvement. For this reason, the porters' wives did much of the organizing, often holding meetings in secret. Rosina Tucker attended several secret meetings with A. Philip Randolph and other union leaders. On behalf of the union she visited some 300 porters at their homes in the Washington area, distributing literature, recruiting members, and collecting dues. She also organized the local Ladies' Auxiliary, which raised funds for the union by hosting dances, dinners, and the like. When the Pullman Company learned of Rosina Tucker's union activities, they fired her husband in retaliation. After Tucker confronted her husband's supervisor at his office, her husband was rehired. Tucker described the scene later: [1]
I looked him right in the eye and banged on his desk and told him I was not employed by the Pullman company and that my husband had nothing to do with any activity I was engaged in ... I said, 'I want you to take care of this situation or I will be back.' He must have been afraid ... because a black woman didn't speak to a white man in this manner. My husband was put back on his run. [2]
In 1938 she attended the national union conference in Chicago, where she chaired the Constitution and Rules committee. That year she was elected secretary-treasurer of the union's auxiliary, a position she held for over 30 years. [2] In 1941 she helped organize the union's first March on Washington, which was called off when President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802. She later helped organize the March on Washington of 1963. [1]
In 1925 Rosina Tucker became the president of The Ladies’ Auxiliary which is also known as the Women’s Economic Councils. It was an official way for her to continue unionist activity but also to develop her personal stance on what racial and gender equality should mean in America in the 1930s. Within her usual duties of organizing trade union women, Tucker also promoted that their role was not only to enjoy a housewife status, relying on husband’s wages but to actively participate by enrolling other women unionists and expanding ideals of women’s vital role in the fight for civil rights. Tucker’s leadership and devotion allowed the Women’s Economic Councils to tie close connections with other unions – both feminine or masculine, black or white. For instance, when the Washington Women’s Trade Union League along with the National Negro Alliance called for a mobilization against racial discrimination in the grocers’ trade, Tucker stepped in by helping the boycott. Her further participation resulted in supporting the WTUL that was fighting for civil rights and equality in such industries as laundry, domestic, hotel and restaurant sectors mainly occupied by African American women. By 1936 Rosina Tucker received a beautiful briefcase as a “token of appreciation for her service.” [3] Working for the Women’s Economic Councils, Tucker always believed that job was never a hobby but “a tool of collective political struggle.” Thus, that briefcase seemed to be a remarkable and symbolic reward for her dedication and professionalism to the cause.
When Tucker was nominated by Randolph to lead the first WEC in Washington, she said: “… God has something for all of us to do and ultimately places us where He wants us to be to carry out his [sic] purposes.” [4] Her strong feeling of belonging to the cause allowed Tucker to forge her sensitive reject against the white southerners’ ideas that a Black woman was “devoid of morality,” thus incompetent. If there were obvious differences between the White and the Black cultural and social ideologies, however the common view of a woman’s role in the masculine society was her subordinate position to a man. Arguably, Tucker and other women saw their status differently; by their active participation in supporting men’s civil rights movement, the auxiliary often helped BSCP locals with rent and additional funding that consisted the utter source of women’s pride. Moreover, Tucker, besides her charity work prior to her active involvement in the WEC activity, claimed that any work including the Auxiliary Ladies’ should be paid: “…since this is a labor organization, which all of us have fought together to establish for better working conditions, … certainly those who are actually doing the work should receive a living wage.” [5] Although none of the activists was considered as feminist, the voice of the Women’s Economic Councils members was becoming louder as to attract men’s attention to their role, professionalism, and organizational experience. But the ultimate WEC’s contribution in the long run was an educational process that many activist women brought to new generations of the Black community empowering the youth with ideas of mass action for equality of civil rights.
Rosina Tucker continued her union and civil rights activities for many years. She helped organize laundry workers, teachers, and red caps in the Washington area. [2] She lobbied Congress for labor and education legislation and testified before House and Senate committees on day care, education, labor, and D.C. voting rights. At the age of 102, she testified before a Senate subcommittee on aging; at 104, she was still traveling the country giving lectures. She also wrote an autobiography, My Life as I Have Lived It, which was published posthumously in 2012. [1]
Tucker narrated a 1982 documentary film about the union, Miles of Smiles, Years of Struggle . Produced by Jack Santino and Paul Wagner, the film has won numerous awards, including four regional Emmys and a CINE Golden Eagle. [6]
She was 105 years old when she died on March 3, 1987. [1]
On that day of her funeral (on the 3rd of March 1987) she was remembered as “Mother Tucker.” The ceremony took place at the 15th Street Presbyterian Church in Washington where she came in for 65 years until her death. Many friends and coworkers were present to pay the last tribute to one of the greatest African American activists for human rights. Thus, Norma McDaniel, one of Tucker’s closest friends, said: “She was a woman of firm conviction, yet, she was as gentle as she was strong.” [7] Expressing the utter sadness and admiration, one of the mourners said: “She had a caring intellect, a full heart and a ready smile.” Quoting Tucker’s own words from her unpublished autobiography, she would have said that day: “Thus, while I live, let not my life be in vain, and when I depart, may there be remembrances of me and my life as I have lived it.” [8] And there were a pride and a strong feeling of Tucker’s devotion that determined almost 70 years of political and social struggles of African American citizens for their rights to be finally accepted and equal.
Asa Philip Randolph was an American labor unionist and civil rights activist. In 1925, he organized and led the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first successful African-American led labor union. In the early Civil Rights Movement and the Labor Movement, Randolph was a prominent voice. His continuous agitation with the support of fellow labor rights activists against racist, unfair labor practices, eventually helped lead President Franklin D. Roosevelt to issue Executive Order 8802 in 1941, banning discrimination in the defense industries during World War II. The group then successfully maintained pressure, so that President Harry S. Truman proposed a new Civil Rights Act and issued Executive Orders 9980 and 9981 in 1948, promoting fair employment, anti-discrimination policies in federal government hiring, and ending racial segregation in the armed services.
Founded in 1925, The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters (BSCP) was the first labor organization led by African Americans to receive a charter in the American Federation of Labor (AFL). The BSCP gathered a membership of 18,000 passenger railway workers across Canada, Mexico, and the United States. Beginning after the American Civil War, the job of Pullman porter had become an important means of work in the black community in the United States. As a result of a decline in railway transportation in the 1960s, BSCP membership declined. It merged in 1978 with the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks (BRAC), now known as the Transportation Communications International Union.
Pullman porters were men hired to work for the railroads as porters on sleeping cars. Starting shortly after the American Civil War, George Pullman sought out former slaves to work on his sleeper cars. Their job was to carry passengers’ baggage, shine shoes, set up and maintain the sleeping berths, and serve passengers. Pullman porters served American railroads from the late 1860s until the Pullman Company ceased operations on December 31, 1968, though some sleeping-car porters continued working on cars operated by the railroads themselves and, beginning in 1971, Amtrak. The term "porter" has been superseded in modern American usage by "sleeping car attendant", with the former term being considered "somewhat derogatory".
Edgar Daniel Nixon, known as E. D. Nixon, was an American civil rights leader and union organizer in Alabama who played a crucial role in organizing the landmark Montgomery bus boycott there in 1955. The boycott highlighted the issues of segregation in the South, was upheld for more than a year by black residents, and nearly brought the city-owned bus system to bankruptcy. It ended in December 1956, after the United States Supreme Court ruled in the related case, Browder v. Gayle (1956), that the local and state laws were unconstitutional, and ordered the state to end bus segregation.
Cottrell Laurence Dellums was an American labor activist and one of the organizers and leaders of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.
Frank Rudolph Crosswaith (1892–1965) was a longtime socialist politician and activist and trade union organizer in New York City who founded and chaired the Negro Labor Committee, established on July 20, 1935, by the Negro Labor Conference.
The A. Philip Randolph Institute (APRI) is an organization for African-American trade unionists, a constituency group of the AFL-CIO, that advocates social, labor, and economic change at the state and federal level, using legal and legislative means.
Addie L. Wyatt was a leader in the United States Labor movement and a civil rights activist. Wyatt is known for being the first African-American woman elected international vice president of a major labor union, the Amalgamated Meat Cutters Union. Wyatt began her career in the union in the early 1950s and advanced in leadership. In 1975, with the politician Barbara Jordan, she was the first African-American woman named by Time magazine as Person of the Year.
The March on Washington Movement (MOWM), 1941–1946, organized by activists A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin was a tool designed to pressure the U.S. government into providing fair working opportunities for African Americans and desegregating the armed forces by threat of mass marches on Washington, D.C. during World War II. When President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802 in 1941, prohibiting discrimination in the defense industry under contract to federal agencies, Randolph and collaborators called-off the initial march.
Lucy Randolph Mason was an American labor activist and suffragist. She was involved in the union movement, the consumer movement and the civil rights movement in the mid-20th century.
Miles of Smiles, Years of Struggle is a 1982 documentary film about a group of Pullman car porters who organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters - claimed to be the first African American trade union. The film examines issues of work, race and dignity. The film uses a variety of sources including historical records and photos, old films, and interviews with and reminiscences of retired porters. The film is narrated by a porter's widow and former union organizer: Rosina Tucker.
The Order of Sleeping Car Conductors (OSCC) was a labor union that represented white sleeping car conductors in the United States and Canada between 1918 and 1942, when it merged with the Order of Railway Conductors.
Willa Mae Sudduth (1925-2015) was one of the founders of the Coalition of Labor Union Women. She was involved in many social justice causes, issues, and concerns most of her adult life. She was an African-American woman and the mother of six children.
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Milton Price Webster was an American trade unionist, best remembered as the first vice president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and leader of its Chicago division. As the union's lead negotiator, Webster was influential in securing a collective bargaining agreement with the Pullman Company – the first national contract won by any black-led American trade union.
Floria Pinkney was a Progressive Era Black female garment worker and union activist and leader from Brooklyn, New York. She was the first African-American woman to hold a leadership role as an organizer within the International Ladies Garment Workers Union (ILGWU). As a legacy dressmaker, Pinkney was involved in the garment industry throughout her life.
Halena Wilson was an American activist, educator, and cooperative movement leader based in Chicago. She served as president of the Ladies Auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters from 1930 to 1956.
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Frank L. Boyd was an American labor organizer and local leader of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters from 1926 to 1951 in Minnesota. He was the first African American person in Minnesota to be an elector for the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor party and also one of the first two African American electors in the history of the Democratic Party.