REMEMBERING MARION BARRY

EXCERPTS FROM THIS HISTORICAL BACKGROUND ON MARION BARRY: Despite his history of political and legal controversies, Barry was a popular and influential figure in Washington, D.C. The alternative weekly Washington City Paper nicknamed him “Mayor for life”, a designation that remained long after Barry left the mayoralty. The Washington Post once stated that “to understand the District of Columbia, one must understand Marion Barry”.

Marion Barry first began his civil rights activism when he was a paperboy in Memphis. The paper he worked for organized a contest in which any boys who gained 15 new customers could win a trip to New Orleans. Barry and a couple of the other black paperboys reached the quota of 15 new customers yet were not allowed to go on the trip to New Orleans, a segregated city. The paper said it could not afford to hire two buses to satisfy Mississippi’s segregation rules. Barry decided to boycott his paper route until they agreed to send the black paperboys on a trip. After the paper offered the black paperboys a chance to go to St. Louis, Missouri, on a trip, because it was not a segregated city, Barry resumed his paper route.

See complete  historical background at:

https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Marion_Barry?fbclid=IwAR3MAtmO0Lvr7EbVw1EA2qVY126-3Je6QJZqUcBGM0qnvq-tIgO3fS2nZWM