Black History Bootcamp. S7. Day 19.

Pleasure Principle 19

Fear Not

Pleasure Muse: Gloria Richardson

Tantalizing Trivia  

  • She was a Civil Rights activist who led The Cambridge Movement in the 1960s.

  • Honored for her leadership, she sat on stage at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963.

  • She grew up in Baltimore but was from a prominent family - of landowners, lawyers, and politicians - from the eastern shore of Maryland, who were free before the Civil War. 

  • Gloria's father, John Hayes, died of a heart attack due to segregation which required him to drive further for medical attention - this was a turning point in her life.

  • She attended Howard University and started social activism against segregation. During her early activism, Richardson was arrested three times. 

  • In 1961, SNCC and The Freedom Rides came to her hometown of Cambridge, Maryland. She and her two daughters got involved in the movement.   

  • In 1962, Richardson was asked to help organize the Cambridge Nonviolent Action Committee (CNAC), the first adult-led affiliate of SNCC.

  • She was a passionate and fiery spokesperson who never minced words and always spoke truth to power as one of the only female leaders of a civil rights organization.  

  • She was brave: rather than asking for civil rights, she asked for economic rights, and she publicly questioned nonviolence as a tactic. 

  • The students – including her daughter – were committed to nonviolence and were attacked by mobs of armed white people. Subsequent freedom walks and sit-ins included armed black men who surrounded the students for protection; clashes escalated.

  • During protests in 1963, Richardson was photographed pushing aside the bayonet and rifle of a National Guardsman; the picture went viral in the media, and she became an icon of the movement.    

  • She signed a peace treaty with Robert F. Kennedy and local officials after an uprising in Maryland for civil rights. 

 

Mirror Work: Look at yourself and repeat 2 Timothy 1:7: “God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.”

Affirmations:

  • I have the power to change my life. 

  • This will pass. It won’t last. 

  • I’m worthy of love and happiness.

Fear Not: A Playlist  

Self-Care Shopping List: Sign up for a self-defense class; if you have a daughter, sign her up too.


Meet us in the Streets: Grab your earbuds, put on your sneakers, and join co-founders Morgan and Vanessa for Black History Bootcamp, a walking podcast powered by GirlTrek. We can’t wait to talk…

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Black History Bootcamp. S7. Day 20.

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Black History Bootcamp. S7. Day 18.