Sue Thrasher
Template:TOCnestleft Sue Thrasher is an education, writer and civil rights activist.
Thrasher is one of the founding members of the Institute for Southern Studies.
Biography
Thrasher attended Scarritt College in Nashville, Tennessee. She received a doctorate in Educational Policy and Research from the School of Education at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She received research fellowship from the Center for the Study of Civil Rights and Race Relations at Duke University.[1]
Civil Rights activism
She became active in the Civil Rights movement after a friend was denied service at a restaurant. Thrasher was one of the early activists in the Southern Students Organizing Committee, and she served as its first executive director.[2]
She has written several books, particularly regarding the Civil Rights movement. She wrote the collaborative volume Deep in Our Hearts: Nine White Women in the Freedom Movement.[3]
After the breakup of Southern Student Organizing Committee two former members, Howard Romaine and Sue Thrasher, were instrumental in forming the Institute for Southern Studies with Julian Bond.
Institute for Southern Studies
Thrasher was listed as a board member for the Institute for Southern Studies.[4]
Founding Board members
Institute for Southern Studies Incorporating Documents in North Carolina |
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The Institute for Southern Studies was incorporated in the state of North Carolina on July 28, 1989. The founding members listed on the incorporation papers:
- Julian Bond President, from Atlanta, Georgia
- Peter Bourne, from Washington, D.C.
- N. Jerold Cohen, from Atlanta, Georgia
- John Lewis, from Atlanta, Georgia
- Marcus Raskin, from Washington, D.C.
- Howard Romaine, from New Iberia, Louisiana
- Robert Sherrill, from Washington, D.C.
- Sue Thrasher Secretary, from Atlanta, Georgia
- Elizabeth Tornquist, from Durham, North Carolina
Other activism
Thrasher has also been involved with the Highlander Research and Education Center in Tennessee. She worked at the organization and at one point served on the board of directors.[5]
References
- ↑ Publishing the Long Civil Rights Movement "SNCC’s 50th: Thoughts from Sue Thrasher," May 10, 2010
- ↑ Scarritt Bennett University "Women of the Civil Rights Movement," Accessed February 12, 2012
- ↑ Amazon.com "Author: Sue Thrasher," Accessed February 12, 2012
- ↑ Heritage Foundation "Institute for Policy Studies," April 19, 1977
- ↑ Southern Changes Volume 4, Number 6, 1982 "Fifty years with Highlander," Accessed February 12, 2012