Frances Hooks
(www.memphisdowntowner.com)
(www.memphisdowntowner.com)
NAACP
BALTIMORE,
MD - The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP) is deeply saddened at the passing of Memphis educator and civil
rights advocate Frances Hooks. Ms. Hooks, known for her dedication to
education and philanthropic endeavors – both in her home in Memphis,
Tennessee, and nationwide – was the dedicated wife of former NAACP
leader Benjamin L. Hooks.
Frances
Hooks married the renowned civil rights figure in 1951, proving to be
his greatest advocate and supporter until his death in 2010. A second
grade teacher in Shelby County, Tennessee, Ms. Hooks put her career on
hold to assist her husband in his own roles as an activist and civil
rights leader. The couple moved to Washington, D.C. in 1972 when Mr.
Hooks became the first African-American appointee to the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC).
Benjamin
Hooks, who began his career as a minister and attorney, rose in the
legal system to become a judge and, later executive director of the
NAACP, serving from 1977 to 1993.
During
her husband’s tenure as executive director, Ms. Hooks became a major
figure within the organization as well. Along with fellow member
Earleen Bolden, she organized the trailblazing Women in the NAACP (WIN),
an unprecedented project which aimed to enhance the leadership roles of
women both within the Association and in everyday life. She also
co-founded The People Power Project, a community advocacy group for race
relations and social justice outreach, and the Memphis Volunteer
Placement Program. Both organizations continue her legacy to this day.
A
true example of civil rights fortitude and social responsibility,
Frances Hooks was 88 years old. She leaves behind the couple’s only
daughter, Patricia, two grandsons and great-grandsons.
It
is with the deepest gratitude and admiration for Frances Hooks’
lifetime of civil rights dedication that the thoughts and prayers of the
NAACP and its national constituency go out to her family.
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