Pauli Murray/Timeline
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[edit] Timeline
1910
- 20 November – born Anna Pauline Murray in Baltimore MD USA
1928
- entered Hunter College, New York City NY USA
1938
- December – applied to and refused entry into the University of North Carolina
1940
- March – arrested for refusing to sit on the back of a bus in Petersburg, Virginia, in an incident of racial bias
1942
- co-founded the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
- All For Mr. Davis: Odell Waller’s story as told by Pauli Murray and Murray Kempton with a preface by President Frank P. Graham of the University of North Carolina and a statement of the bearing of the poll tax on Waller’s case and on the "right to a fair jury and a free vote" was published by the Workers Defense League and re-published by the League For Adult Education.
1944
- received LL.B from Howard University, Washington DC USA
- awarded Rosenwald Fellowship but refused entry to Harvard University as a result of gender bias
1945
- received LL.M from University of California, Berkeley CA USA
- became the first African-American woman to serve as an Assistant Attorney General for the state of California
1946
- ran for the New York City Council (Brooklyn), came in second
- named Woman of the Year by the National Council of Negro Women
1947
- named Woman of the Year by Mademoiselle magazine
1950
- States' Laws on Race and Color was published by Woman’s Division of Christian Service, Board of Missions of the Methodist Church.
1952
- lost a post at Cornell University because her references were considered too radical.
Her references? Eleanor Roosevelt, Thurgood Marshall, A. Philip Randolph
1956
- hired by Paul, Weiss, Rifkin, Wharton & Garrison, New York City NY USA
- October – Proud Shoes: The Story Of An American Family was published by Harper & Row
1960
- traveled to and was a senior lecturer at the Ghana School of Law in Accra, Ghana
1961
- appointed to the President's Commission on the Status of Women Committee on Civil and Political Rights
- The constitution and government of Ghana by Leslie Rubin and Pauli Murray was published by Sweet & Maxwell, London, England, United Kingdom. A second edition was published in 1964 by Sweet & Maxwell as well as African Universities Press of Lagos, Nigeria.
1965
- received J.S.D. from Yale University, New Haven CT USA
1966
- co-founded the National Organization for Women (NOW)
1967
- served as vice-president and professor of Political Science at Benedict College, Columbia SC USA
- Human Rights U. S. A.; 1948-1966. was published by the Cincinnati Service Center, Board of Missions, Methodist Church.
1968
- served as a visiting professor of American Civilization at Brandeis University, Waltham MA USA
1970
- Dark Testament and Other Poems was published by Silvermine
- awarded the Alumni Award for Distinguished Post-Graduate Achievement in Law and Public Service, Howard University, Washington DC USA
1971
- awarded the Louis Stulberg Chair in Law and Politics and a full professorship of American Studies at Brandeis University, Waltham MA USA
- received the Eleanor Roosevelt Award, Professional Women's Caucus
1972
- received the Whitney M. Young Jr. Memorial Award
1973
- enshrined in the Hunter College Hall of Fame, Hunter College, New York City NY USA
- Proud Shoes: The Story Of An American Family was re-published by the Reprint Company of Spartanburg SC USA.
1976
- received Master of Divinity, General Theological Seminary, New York City NY USA
- received honorary degree, Dartmouth College, Hanover NH USA
1977
- 8 January – ordained as an Episcopal priest, the first African-American woman to do so, at the National Cathedral, Washington DC USA
1978
- received honorary degree, Radcliffe College, Cambridge MA USA
- Proud Shoes: The Story Of An American Family was re-published by Harper & Row.
1979
- received honorary degree, Yale University, New Haven CT USA
1982
- Award for Exemplary Christian Ministry, National Institute for Women of Color
1985
- 1 July – died of cancer, in Pittsburgh PA USA
1987
- Her autobiography, Song In A Weary Throat: An American Pilgrimage, was published posthumously by Harper & Row
1988
- awarded Robert F. Kennedy Book Award for Song In A Weary Throat: An American Pilgrimage
- awarded the Christopher Award for Song In A Weary Throat: An American Pilgrimage
1989
- Pauli Murray: the autobiography of a Black activist, feminist, lawyer, priest, and poet., originally titled Song In A Weary Throat: An American Pilgrimage, was [re-]published by the University of Tennessee Press.
1990
- Orange County, NC USA established the Pauli Murray Human Relations Award to commemorate her life's work,
1997
- States' Laws on Race and Color was re-published by the University of Georgia Press.
1999
- Proud Shoes: The Story Of An American Family was re-published by Beacon Press.
2006
- Pauli Murray & Caroline Ware: forty years of letters in black and white, edited by Anne Firor Scott, was published by the University of North Carolina Press.
- Pauli Murray: selected sermons and writings, edited with an introduction by Anthony B. Pinn, was published by Orbis Books.
[edit] References
Publication information verified courtesy of The Library of Congress of the United States.