- Rowena Moore
Infobox Person
name = Rowena Moore
caption =
birth_date = 1910
birth_place =
death_date =
death_place =
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known_for = Community activism
occupation =
nationality = AmericanRowena Moore (1910 - ?) was a union and civic activist, and founder of the
Malcolm X Memorial Foundation inOmaha, Nebraska . She led the effort to have theMalcolm X House Site recognized for its association with the life of the national civil rights leader. It was listed on both theNational Register of Historic Places and the Nebraska register of historic sites.Early life and family
Moore was born in 1910 in
Meridian, Oklahoma . When her father got a job in the meatpacking industry in 1924, her family moved to Omaha, Nebraska. In 1927, she married. She and her husband had a son.Career and public life
During
World War II Moore noticed that while many women were given jobs in the meatpacking industry,African American women were discriminated against. Moore organized a union called the Defense Women’s Club of black women who were committed to securing employment and supporting the war effort. [Horowitz, R. and Halpern, R. (1999). "Work, Race, and Identity: Self-Representation in the Narratives of Black Packinghouse Workers", Oral History Association] Their goals were to promotewar bonds andfood rationing ,child care for working mothers, and securing jobs for black women. They wrote letters to the federalFair Employment Practices Committee . An official came to Omaha to order theSouth Omaha packing houses to stop discriminating against black women. Soon after, Moore and some 400 other women were hired. Moore worked in the meatpacking industry for twenty years, managing to retain her position after veterans returned from the war. [(nd) [http://www.cdpheritage.org/exhibit/soundModel/community/community12b.cfm "The West Out Loud: Western Community"] , Collaborative Digitization Program, Retrieved 4/27/07, inactive link]Moore rose to become secretary of the meat cutters’ local union. In 1948, she became secretary of the Omaha Metropolitan Labor Council. She further challenged discrimination in the 1950s, when the meatpacking plants attempted to restrict employment. [Horowitz, R. and Halpern, R. (1999).] These actions led to Moore's getting fired from the plants; however, she maintained her passion to fight for social justice.
Moore was elected chairwoman of the Douglas County Demographic Central Committee in 1971. She was the first black woman to run for the
Omaha City Council . Inspired by listening to Malcolm X’s speeches, Moore decided to start an organization to benefit African Americans. When she learned her father had lived in the house where Malcolm X had first lived and her family still owned the property, Moore became the founding president of the Malcolm X Memorial Foundation. Her family made their five lots the basis of the foundation's site. She led an effort to have the site recognized (the house was torn down in 1965 before the family recognized its association with the life of Malcolm X.) Today the Foundation works to advance cultural and educational issues.The Foundation's has preserved the
Malcolm X House Site and gained its recognition as a Nebraska historical heritage site and listing on the National Register of Historic Places. The Foundation has plans to develop the property as a park and link it to a nearby municipal park. [(nd) [http://www.malcolmxfoundation.org/MXMF/Welcome.html "Our Founder"] , Malcolm X Memorial Foundation Website, accessed 13 Jul 2008]Moore continued to look for ways to honor Malcolm X's legacy. In 1989 she proposed renaming the
North Omaha Freeway as the Malcolm X Freeway. [(1989) [http://www.brothermalcolm.net/2002/omaha/pdf/freeway.pdf Letter from the Omaha mayor] responding to Moore - link does not work] She led an early 1990s gathering with the African-American Progressive Action Network and the National MalcolmX Commemoration Commission to celebrate Malcolm X's life . [Fuson, K. "Omaha woman never forgot legacy of Malcolm X", "Des Moines Register"]References
* "I'm Been Ahead of My Time: Rowena Moore and Black Women's Activism in Omaha", pp. 85-99, in Halpern, R. and Horowitz, R. (1999) "Meatpackers: An Oral History of Black Packinghouse Workers and Their Struggle for Racial and Economic Equality", New York: Monthly Review Press, 1999.
ee also
*
List of people from North Omaha, Nebraska Citations
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