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SR0561 |
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LRB094 17853 HSS 53154 r |
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| SENATE RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, The members of the Senate of the State of Illinois |
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| learned with regret of the death of Jorja English Palmer, |
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| Chicago organizer, activist, and freedom fighter, on December |
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| 29, 2005; and
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| WHEREAS, Mrs. Palmer was born in New Madrid, Missouri, the |
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| seventh of nine children; her parents died when she was four, |
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| and she and her siblings moved to Chicago's South Side to live |
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| with an aunt; and
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| WHEREAS, She graduated from Du Sable High School in 1948 |
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| and had already joined the National Association for the |
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| Advancement of Colored People at the urging of several |
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| teachers; this was the beginning of a lifetime of activism that |
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| included working in public relations for Dr. Martin Luther King |
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| Jr., the Reverend Jesse Jackson Sr., and Minister Louis |
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| Farrakhan; she was a leader in the battle to end school |
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| segregation in Chicago, and she fought for fair housing in the |
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| city;
and
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| WHEREAS, In 1975, Mrs. Palmer married Lutrelle "Lu" Fleming |
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| Palmer Jr., who made a name for himself as an outspoken |
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| advocate for civil rights as a journalist for the Chicago Daily |
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| News and a regular commentator on Chicago's airwaves; he |
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| preceded her in death in 2004; together, the Palmers were a |
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| "one-two punch" of commitment to a range of causes, including |
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| founding Chicago Black United Communities (CBUC); and
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| WHEREAS, In 1981, the couple used the CBUC to launch the |
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| city's largest voter registration drive, which solidified a |
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| constituency of black voters for Harold Washington, who went on |
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| to become Chicago's first black mayor in 1983; in 1982, Mrs. |
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| Palmer established the Stanford English Home for Boys, which is |
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| considered the first group home in Illinois for black children, |