Reverend Dr. Pauli Murray: Civil Rights Activist, Poet and Lawyer

Durham-based civil rights activist Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray, was the first Black person to earn a doctorate in law from Yale Law School, a founder of the National Organization for Women and the first Black woman to be ordained an Episcopal priest.

As a Black, queer, southern woman, Murray fought for racial and gender equality, inspiring many people like the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Murray’s life is filled with many firsts, with a legacy that has influenced and revolutionized many generations of activists, legal scholars and religious leaders. 

From her contributions on school segregation; arguing for civil rights lawyers to challenge segregation laws as unconstitutional, to challenging the intersectionality of race and sex discrimination, Murray is an overlooked pioneer and trailblazer in our movements for racial justice and gender equality.

Hear more about Pauli Murray’s life from the North Carolina Public Radio’s podcast, Pauli, or visit the Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice.

Share:

More Posts

North Carolina leads the southeast in energy efficiency, but trails other regions

North Carolina is one of only two southeastern states with a fully running Home Efficiency Rebate program. Energy Saver NC supports residents who want to electrify their homes and use that electricity more efficiently, offering up to $16,000 toward new appliances, better insulation, or other purchases that help a home use electricity more efficiently.

Posible oficina de ICE en Cary genera preguntas

Un contrato de arrendamiento federal para oficinas en 11000 Regency Parkway, en Cary, Carolina del Norte, ha generado preguntas entre residentes después de que un reportaje de WIRED sugiriera que el espacio podría convertirse en una nueva oficina del U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).