Everything about C Delores Tucker totally explained
C. DeLores Tucker (née
Cynthia DeLores Nottage) (
October 4,
1927-
October 12,
2005) was a
U.S. politician and
civil rights activist best known for her participation in the
Civil Rights Movement and stance against
gangsta rap music.
Early life
Born in
Philadelphia to a
minister and a "
Christian feminist mother" on
October 4,
1927, she was the tenth of thirteen children. Ms. Tucker attended
Temple University and the
University of Pennsylvania-
Wharton School. (Later in life she was the recipient of two
honorary doctoral degrees from
Morris College in
Sumter, South Carolina and
Villa Maria College in
Pennsylvania, for this reason, she's sometimes referred to as "Dr. Tucker").
In 1951, she married William "Bill" Tucker, a successful Philadelphia
real estate agent and she herself worked in real estate and
insurance sales early in her career.
Civil rights activities
Tucker had a long history in the
Civil Rights Movement. Early on, her civil activities included participating in the 1965 march in
Selma, Alabama alongside the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr. and raising funds for the
NAACP.
She was the convening founder and national chair of the National Congress of Black Women, Inc. (NCBW), having succeeded the Hon.
Shirley Chisholm in 1992.
Tucker also was responsible for the Governor’s appointment of more women judges and more women and
African Americans to boards and commissions than ever before. She also led the effort to make
Pennsylvania one of the first
states to pass the
Equal Rights Amendment. As Chief of Elections of Pennsylvania, she was a leader in instituting a voter registration by mail and reducing the voting age from 21 to 18 years of age.
Political career
In 1971, Tucker became the first female
African-American Secretary of State in the U.S., serving for the
Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania until 1977. During this time she instituted the first
Commission on the Status of Women.
She was founder and president of the Bethune-DuBois Institute, Inc., which she established in 1991 to promote the cultural development of
African American youth through scholarships and educational programs. Ms. Tucker also launched, and serves as publisher of the renowned publication,
Vital Issues: The Journal of African American Speeches; an acknowledgement of its launching was jglkjklvjH. Gray (congressman)|William H. Gray]].
Stance on hip hop music
Ms. Tucker dedicated much of the last few years of her life to removing sexually explicit lyrics from
rap and hip-hop tracks, citing a concern that the lyrics were
misogynistic and threatened the moral foundation of the African American community.
Called "narrow-minded" by some rappers who often called her out in their lyrics, Ms. Tucker picketed stores that sold
rap music and bought stock in labels like
Sony,
Time Warner, and others in order to protest
hip-hop at their shareholders' meetings. She also fought against the
NAACP's decision to nominate late rapper
Tupac Shakur for one of its
Image Awards and filed a $10 million lawsuit against his estate for comments that the rapper made in his song "
How Do U Want It?" on the album
All Eyez on Me, in which Shakur rapped
"Delores Tucker you's a motherfucker / Instead of trying to help a nigga you destroy a brother". In her lawsuit, Tucker claimed that comments in this song, and on the track "Wonda Why They Call U Bitch" from the same album, damaged her sex life with her husband. This case was eventually dismissed.
Rappers like
Eminem rap criticized Tucker. In the song "
Rap Game" by his group
D12, Eminem raps
"I'm all for America, fuck the government / Tell that C. Delores Tucker slut to suck a dick / Motherfucker ducked, what the fuck? Son of a bitch / Take away my gun, I'm gonna tuck some other shit". In his song "
Church for Thugs",
The Game raps "
I've got more hatred in my soul than Pac had for Delores Tucker." Jay-Z chimes in as well, with the lines "
I don't care if you're C. Dolores Tucker or you're Bill O'Reilly, you only riling me up," from
The Black Album's "Threat."
Tucker later went on to serve in the Advisory Board of the
Parents Television Council until her death in 2005.
Accolades
Selected as one of
25 of the World’s Most Intriguing People by
People magazine, Tucker was also selected as a
People Magazine 1996 Yearbook Honoree, and was featured in the inaugural issue of
John F. Kennedy, Jr.'s
George magazine for her crusade against
gangsta rap. In addition, she's been acknowledged for her deep concern for children by
First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in the book
It Takes A Village. The
National Women's Political Caucus and
Redbook also named her as the woman best qualified to be Ambasador to the
United Nations. For five consecutive years, from 1972 through
1977, she was listed as among
Ebony magazine's
100 Most Influential Black Americans. During that period, she was listed as
Ladies Home Journal Nominee for Woman of the Year in both
1975 and 1976. She was recognized by
Ebony as one of the '100 Most Influential Black Organization Leaders' in the country in 2001 and 2002. Dr. Tucker was also a prominent member of
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.
Death
Dr. Tucker died on Wednesday,
October 12,
2005 at Suburban Woods Health Center in
Norristown, Pennsylvania at the age of 78.
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