Lurma Rackley

Lurma M. Rackley (born April 24, 1949)[1] is an American author, journalist and publicist. The daughter of a civil rights activist, she participated in civil rights demonstrations and was arrested sixteen times before she was thirteen. After college, she became a journalist and later, a publicist with the Washington, D.C. city government. In 1981, Petey Greene asked her to collaborate with him on his autobiography, recording audiotaped interviews with her shortly before his death. Rackley published her book about Greene in 2004.

Biography

Rackley is the daughter of civil rights activist Gloria Blackwell. Her mother and father got divorced when she and her sister were very young and were adopted by her mother's second husband, Larney G. Rackley, a professor at South Carolina State University.[2]

Active with her mother in the Orangeburg, South Carolina Freedom Movement, Rackley was arrested sixteen times by the age of thirteen.[3] Once, she and her mother missed a court appearance when they used the "whites only" restroom in the courthouse and were arrested.[3] Although an honors student,[3] at the age of 14, she was sentenced to seven years in reform school[4] because of her many arrests as part of the Orangeburg Freedom Movement. Then-attorney Matthew J. Perry appealed the sentence and obtained her release.[2][4] When threatened with reform school, Rackley's mother wanted her to stop protesting, but Rackley refused. She told her mother she couldn't stop when others were putting themselves on the line, so they reached a compromise that neither would picket if the other were in jail.[2]

Rackley received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Clark College, now Clark Atlanta University in 1970 and a special Masters degree from the Columbia University School of Journalism that same year.[5] She got her first job after college in late 1970 at The Evening Star, which later became The Washington Star.[6] In 1979, she left to work for the city government in Washington, D.C., eventually becoming the press secretary for Washington, D.C. mayor Marion Barry[7] during some of Barry's public struggles.

In 1981, Rackley was asked to write an article about Greene for the Washington North Star. After the interview, Greene spoke to her about collaborating with him to write his autobiography.[7] Over the course of a year, they recorded audiotaped interviews until Greene fell terminally ill.[7] After Greene's death, interest in publishing the book weakened. Rackley eventually published it herself in 2004.[7]

After eleven years of working for the city, Rackley left to work for Hill and Knowlton, a public relations firm, where she was vice president in charge of media relations.[5] After two years, she left to head up the communications department of Amnesty International USA. She then worked at Eddie Bauer, where she set up their corporate social responsibility unit. She then joined CARE, where she was head of media relations.[6] She now works for Habitat for Humanity and as a freelance writer.

Personal

She has one son, Rumal Rackley, from her relationship with Gil Scott-Heron[8][9] and lives in Atlanta.

Books

References

  1. Who's Who Among African Americans (January 1, 2009). Retrieved June 11, 2011]
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Carolyn Click, "Orangeburg civil rights icon, and Claflin alumna Dr. Gloria Rackley Blackwell dies" Claflin University (December 10, 2010). Retrieved June 2, 2011
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Gloria Blackwell (Rackley) Biography" The History Makers. Retrieved June 3, 2011
  4. 4.0 4.1 Richard Reid, "The Gloria Rackley-Blackwell story" The Times and Democrat, (February 22, 2011). Retrieved June 3, 2011
  5. 5.0 5.1 Lurma M. Rackley Who's Who Among African Americans (2009). Retrieved June 2, 2011
  6. 6.0 6.1 Amanda Miller Littlejohn, "Test Drive My Job: Seasoned Media Professional Lurma Rackley" Mopwater PR + Media Notes (April 2, 2009). Retrieved June 2. 2011
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Amanda S. Miller, "Talk to Me" Washington City Paper (August 3, 2007). Retrieved June 2, 2011
  8. Patrice Gaines, "Gil Scott-Heron Remembered as Tortured Genius" blAck Americaweb (May 31, 2011). Retrieved June 2, 2011
  9. Courtland Milloy, "Protest poet was more than “The Revolution" The Washington Post (June 1, 2011). Retrieved June 2, 2011

External links