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				C. DeLores Tucker Dies
			 
 
			
			NAACP SPECIAL CONTRIBUTIONS FUND MEMBER and my Godmother
 Posted on Thu, Oct. 13, 2005
 
 
 C. DeLores Tucker dies at 78
 
 Lifetime of activism with many firsts
 
 By Gayle Ronan Sims
 
 Inquirer Staff Writer
 
 Political activist C. DeLores Tucker, 78, who marched arm in arm with
 the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was the first African American to
 serve as secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and in later
 years protested against obscenities in rap music, died yesterday.
 
 The West Mount Airy resident spent her entire life fighting for civil
 rights; it was a struggle she carried out with poise and elegance. She
 was known for wearing turbans with her matching ensembles, even when
 taking to the streets or being arrested.
 
 Within hours of her death - of undisclosed causes at Suburban Woods
 Health and Rehabilitation Center in Norristown - many of the area's
 highest-ranking politicians issued statements.
 
 "The cause of civil rights was a lifelong crusade for C. DeLores
 Tucker," Mayor Street said. "Her continued work promoting and protecting the
 legacy of Dr. King and the nonviolent movement for change will never be
 forgotten."
 
 "America has lost one of the great civil rights activists of our
 time... . She did it with dedication, class, grace and dignity," Gov. Rendell
 said.
 
 "I think the state, the nation and the world will long remember a woman
 who stood up for all people and who dedicated her life to helping
 others," said Lt. Gov. Catherine Baker Knoll.
 
 "She was an unstoppable bell ringer for social change," said U.S. Rep.
 Robert A. Brady (D., Pa.).
 
 "At a time when women and people of color often were relegated to
 second-class citizenship, she rose above and challenged those assertions,
 demanding to be engaged based on her intellect and passion," said State
 Sen. Anthony H. Williams (D., Phila.).
 
 Known for thunderous speeches reflective of her father, the Rev.
 Whitfield Nottage of the old Ebenezer Community Tabernacle in North
 Philadelphia, Mrs. Tucker took to the stump at age 16 - protesting from the back
 of a flatbed truck outside the old Bellevue Stratford hotel because it
 refused entrance to black athletes.
 
 Cynthia DeLores Nottage, the second-youngest of 11 children, married
 William Tucker shortly after graduating from Girls High School in 1946.
 
 In high school, she had shown attributes of a leader and activist by
 organizing students for elections. Throughout her life she got women to
 identify with her, giving them the feeling they were all running
 together.
 
 After attending classes at Temple University, she earned a real estate
 license and with her husband founded an insurance company in the Olney
 section of the city. Later, she took business classes at the University
 of Pennsylvania.
 
 The flamboyant Mrs. Tucker marched into history at the side of Dr. King
 during a civil rights protest in Selma, Ala., in 1965.
 
 In 1970, she was the first black woman to be named vice chair of the
 state Democratic Party and the first woman vice president of the
 Pennsylvania NAACP.
 
 One year later, Gov. Milton J. Shapp tapped her as the first black and
 first woman to be secretary of the commonwealth. Mrs. Tucker relished
 her high political profile. The license plate on her state limousine
 read "3" - to let everyone know she was the third-most-powerful person in
 Pennsylvania government.
 
 During her tenure, Mrs. Tucker helped streamline voter registration and
 lower the voting age to 18, and started the first State Commission on
 the Status of Women.
 
 Mrs. Tucker fell from political grace in 1977, when Shapp fired her for
 using state employees to write
 political speeches that earned her $65,000.
 
 Supporters, including the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Dick Gregory and Rosa
 Parks, rallied around her, saying her dismissal was racially motivated.
 
 After being fired, Mrs. Tucker excused herself by saying: "Maybe it is
 wrong, but it is a way of life."
 She wondered at the time whether a white man would have been treated
 the same way.
 
 Mrs. Tucker was not reinstated, and she never again held public office.
 She ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor in 1978, and lost a bid
 for the U.S. Senate in 1980.
 
 She returned to selling real estate and insurance, but remained
 politically active, making many friends along the way. She was head of the
 minority caucus of the Democratic National Committee and was a founding
 member of the National Women's Political Caucus.
 
 In 1984, Mrs. Tucker founded the National Political Congress of Black
 Women, now called the National Congress of Black Women.
 
 In 1993, she grabbed headlines when she came out against obscenities in
 rap music. She protested, wrote letters, and picketed the NAACP in
 1994, even though she was on the board of trustees, when it nominated
 gangsta rapper Tupac Shakur for one of its Image Awards. (He did not win.)
 
 Mrs. Tucker said in a 1994 Inquirer article that she was "ready to go
 to jail, ready to die, whatever is necessary to stop this pornographic
 filth... ."
 
 Indeed, Mrs. Tucker was always ready. She was arrested a handful of
 times while picketing in front of music stores that sold the music.
 
 She was such a vocal and visible opponent of the messages in the music
 that rappers took to ridiculing her in their lyrics. She fired back
 with defamation lawsuits against the artists and the conglomerates that
 distributed their music.
 
 In 1999, a federal judge threw out the suit Mrs. Tucker filed against
 the estate of Shakur, who was slain in 1996, involving the rhyming of
 her surname with an obscenity in his 1996 album All Eyez on Me.
 
 She was also unsuccessful in suits against Time, Newsweek and other
 publications for their apparent misinterpretation of a lawyer's comment to
 reporters about her lawsuit seeking damages for emotional distress
 because of a "loss of consortium."
 
 The legal definition of consortium includes a spouse's loss of
 "society, guidance, companionship and sexual relations," but it was the sexual
 aspect that magazines and a number of newspapers, including the
 Philadelphia Daily News, cited.
 
 Mrs. Tucker and her attorneys denied that the suit had anything to do
 with damage to her sex life.
 The suit was thrown out by U.S. District Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter in
 1999.
 
 Mrs. Tucker is survived by her husband.
 
 Services have not been arranged.
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