|
|||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
| ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened to | ||||||
3 | learn of the death of
Anna R. Langford of Chicago; and
| ||||||
4 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford was born to Arthur and Alice | ||||||
5 | Riggs on October 27, 1917 in Springfield, Ohio; she was the | ||||||
6 | youngest of three siblings; and
| ||||||
7 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford was raised by her grandmother | ||||||
8 | after her parents died; and
| ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford moved to Chicago in 1933 to live | ||||||
10 | with her aunt and uncle; and
| ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford graduated from Hyde Park High | ||||||
12 | School and then attended the Washburn Trade School; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford started her professional career | ||||||
14 | as a typist in the Social Security office; she then relocated | ||||||
15 | to the Election Commissioner's office, where she aided in | ||||||
16 | setting up a permanent registration system; and
| ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford later worked for and managed the | ||||||
18 | old Secretary of State office on Cottage Grove Avenue in | ||||||
19 | Chicago; and
|
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford married Larry Langford in 1947; | ||||||
2 | and
| ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford attended John Marshall Law School | ||||||
4 | to become an attorney; while pursuing her goal, she had a son, | ||||||
5 | Larry Jr., in 1952; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford moved with her family to the | ||||||
7 | Englewood neighborhood, integrating the 6000 block of Bishop | ||||||
8 | Street; and
| ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford would later join Hope | ||||||
10 | Presbyterian Church; and
| ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford was admitted to the Illinois Bar | ||||||
12 | in 1956; however, as a black attorney, she was refused office | ||||||
13 | space in downtown Chicago; and
| ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford set up a neighborhood practice | ||||||
15 | and provided legal representation to the poor on matters | ||||||
16 | ranging from divorce to criminal defense to bankruptcy; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford spent much of her time in the | ||||||
18 | 1960s providing free legal services to the residents of | ||||||
19 | Mississippi, under dangerous conditions, as they sought to gain |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | voting rights; and
| ||||||
2 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford worked closely with Dr. Martin | ||||||
3 | Luther King and a young Jesse Jackson to protest segregation | ||||||
4 | and discrimination in Chicago; and
| ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford successfully challenged the | ||||||
6 | regular organization in 1971, winning the seat of Alderman of | ||||||
7 | the 16th Ward and becoming the first black female alderman in | ||||||
8 | the history of the Chicago City Council; and
| ||||||
9 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford went on to serve three terms and | ||||||
10 | was an avid supporter of Mayor Harold Washington; and | ||||||
11 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford retired from the Chicago City | ||||||
12 | Council in 1991 but remained active in local politics, always | ||||||
13 | working to improve her beloved neighborhood of Englewood, where | ||||||
14 | she would spend the balance of her life; and
| ||||||
15 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford has received many humanitarian | ||||||
16 | and civic awards and citations during her lifetime; and
| ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford was called home to glory on | ||||||
18 | September 17, 2008; and
| ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford was preceded in death by her |
| |||||||
| |||||||
1 | parents, Arthur and Alice Riggs, and her husband, Larry | ||||||
2 | Langford; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, Anna R. Langford is survived by her son, Lawrence | ||||||
4 | W. Langford Jr., her grandchildren, Michael, Leslie, and Kris | ||||||
5 | Hicks, her step grandson, Richard Pegue, her daughter-in-law, | ||||||
6 | Marguerita, her great-grandson, Christopher; her niece, Cheryl | ||||||
7 | Williams; her nephew, Arlester Jones; and her long-time | ||||||
8 | friends, Nanny Ryan, Lillian Merrill, and Grace Edwards; | ||||||
9 | therefore, be it
| ||||||
10 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-FIFTH GENERAL | ||||||
11 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn, along with | ||||||
12 | her family and friends, the passing of Anna R. Langford; and be | ||||||
13 | it further
| ||||||
14 | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be | ||||||
15 | presented to the family of Anna R. Langford as an expression of | ||||||
16 | our sympathy.
|