
(Born March 24, 1912,
Richmond, Va., U.S.—died April 20, 2010, Washington, D.C.) American civil
rights and women's rights activist, a widely respected and influential leader
of organizations focused primarily on improving the circumstances of and
opportunities for African American women.
Reared
in Rankin, Pa., Height graduated in 1933 from New York University with both
bachelor's and master's degrees in educational psychology. She was involved in
social service for some six decades, four of them as president of the National
Council of Negro Women (NCNW), an umbrella organization that comprises civic,
church, educational, labour, community, and professional groups. Her
involvement with the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA) facilities for
black women, dating to the 1930s, led to her advocacy of improved conditions
for black domestic workers, to her election to national office within the YWCA,
and to her involvement with that organization's integration policy. In 1957 she
became the fourth president of the NCNW, which she steered through the civil
rights struggles of the 1960s by organizing voter registration in the South,
voter education in the North, and scholarship programs for student civil rights
workers. In the 1970s she helped the NCNW win grants to provide vocational
training and assist women in opening businesses.
Height
subsequently used her position to call on the black community to make itself
more independent, placing special emphasis in the 1990s on drawing young people
into the organization to join in the war against drugs, illiteracy, and
unemployment. She also served as a social services expert on local, state, and
federal governmental committees concerned with women's issues. Before retiring
in 1996, she helped secure funding for a national headquarters for the NCNW in
the historic Sears House in Washington, D.C., where the organization also
housed its Dorothy I. Height Leadership Institute. The numerous honors bestowed
upon her include the Presidential Medal of Freedom (1994) and the Congressional
Gold Medal (2004).
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