Knowledge (XXG)

Evelyn Cunningham

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198:. Cunningham wrote a three-part series on the King family from those meetings. She often worked with Thurgood Marshall, covering the cases he defended. One evening, an after hours club they were attending in Harlem was raided. " accosted a cop she knew, telling him, "You can't arrest this man. He is very, very important, he's with the NAACP, you've got to let him go." King, Devil in the Grove, pg. 41. 233:
In 1970, Cunningham was one of the founders of the New York Coalition of One Hundred Black Women, a non-profit organization dedicated to bettering the lives of black women "and their families through implementing initiatives and services to address important social, political, economical cultural
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background. A dedicated career woman who once expressed the opinion that "marriage isn't much good for a career woman", nevertheless she married four times. Her last marriage was to Austin H. Brown, who died in 2003. A
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She had one brother, Clyde Whitehurst Long, who died in 1973, leaving a daughter, whom Evelyn raised. She also had two step-daughters from Austin's previous marriage, which also gave her two grandchildren.
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Tall—almost six feet tall in heels—and with red hair, Cunningham was called "Big East," referring both to her height and her
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was an influential presence during and in the years preceding the civil rights movement. Cunningham joined the
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office at 125th street. She earned the nickname the "lynching editor" due to her extensive coverage of
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in 1965 as a special assistant to the then governor. She maintained this title in Washington
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In the 2000s, Cunningham was appointed to the New York City Commission on Women's Issues by
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when Evelyn was a child; she was educated in city schools and graduated from
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The Associated Press, "Evelyn Cunningham, Journalist and Aide, Dies at 94",
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Joyce Wadler, "Public Lives: Still Fighting the Battle of the Sexes,"
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She also met with a number of civil rights leaders, including
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Evelyn Cunningham was born Evelyn Elizabeth Long in
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Index

Elizabeth City, North Carolina
Manhattan, New York
Nelson Rockefeller
civil rights movement
Pittsburgh Courier
George Polk Award
Elizabeth City, North Carolina
New York City
Hunter College High School
Long Island University
black
Pittsburgh Courier
Harlem
lynchings
Bull Connor
Birmingham, Alabama
Martin Luther King Jr.
Malcolm X
WLIB
Nelson Rockefeller
during his vice presidency
Nixon
Task Force on Women's Rights and Responsibilities
Michael Bloomberg
New York City
Juilliard
pianist
Diamond District

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