Monday, December 22, 2025

A00146 - Theodore Judson Jemison, Baton Rouge Bus Boycott Leader

Theodore Judson Jemison (August 1, 1918 – November 15, 2013), better known as T. J. Jemison, was the president of the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. from 1982 to 1994. It is the largest African-American religious organization. He oversaw the construction of the Baptist World Center in Nashville, Tennessee, the headquarters of his convention.

In 1953, while minister of a large church in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Jemison helped lead the first civil rights boycott of segregated seating in public bus service. The organization of free rides, coordinated by churches, was a model used later in 1955-1956 by the Montgomery Bus Boycott in Alabama.  Jemison was one of the founders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1957. 

In 2003, the 50th anniversary of the Baton Rouge bus boycott was honored with three days of events in the city. These were organized by a young resident born two decades after the action

T. J. Jemison was born in 1918 in Selma, Alabama where his father, the Reverend David V. Jemison, was the pastor of the Tabernacle Baptist Church. He came from a family of prominent ministers and strong churchgoing women. He attended local segregated public schools.

Jemison earned a bachelor's degree from Alabama State University, a historically black college in the state capital of Montgomery, where he joined Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. He earned a divinity degree at Virginia Union University in the capital city of Richmond, Virginia, to prepare for the ministry. He later did graduate study at New York University in New York City.

In 1949, Jemison was first called as a minister by Mt. Zion First Baptist Church in Baton Rouge. There he worked chiefly on internal church matters, overseeing construction and continued fundraising of a new church building. At the time, his father was serving as President of the National Baptist Convention, the association of African-American Baptist churches established in 1895.

Within a few years, Jemison became involved in an early civil rights action. In 1950, the city had ended black-owned buses, requiring all residents to use its monopoly system, which enforced segregated seating. It was racially segregated by law; in practice, black citizens had to sit at the back half of the bus or stand, even if seats in the front "white" section were empty. Jemison said later he was struck by "watching buses pass by his church and seeing black people standing in the aisles, not allowed by law to sit down in seats reserved for whites. 'I thought that was just out of order, that was just cruel'." 

Making up 80 percent of the passengers on the system, African Americans were fed up with standing on buses while "white" seats remained empty, particularly after the company had raised fares from ten to fifteen cents in January 1953. Rev. Jemison took up the issue with the Baton Rouge City Council.  He testified on February 11, 1953 against the fare increase and asked for an end of the practice of reserving so many seats for whites. The city council met that demand, without abolishing segregation per se. They passed Ordinance 222, which established a first come-first served system: it allowed black passengers to board the bus from the back and take any empty seats available, while white passengers boarded from the front. In actuality though, the white drivers largely ignored the ordinance and continued to pressure blacks to sit in the rear of the buses.

When bus drivers harassed those black passengers who sought to sit in empty seats reserved for whites, Jemison tested the law on June 13, 1953, when he sat in a front seat of a bus. The next day the bus company suspended two bus drivers for not complying with the city ordinance. The drivers' union responded by striking for four days. That strike ended on June 18, 1953 when state Attorney General Fred S. LeBlanc declared the city ordinance unconstitutional on the grounds that it violated the state's compulsory segregation laws.

Reverend Jemison set up a free-ride network, coordinated by the churches, to compensate for the lack of public transit. This was its signature action for the boycott, which was also adopted for later use. "While the Baton Rouge boycott lasted only two weeks, it set protest standards, and is growing in recognition as a precedent-setting event in the history of the modern American civil rights movement."

With most of the black bus riders refusing to ride, by the third day the buses were almost entirely empty. The boycott lasted eight days, as Reverend Jemison called it off after successful negotiations between black leaders and the city council. The following day, the city council passed an ordinance under which the first-come, first-served, seating system of back-to-front and front-to-back was reinstated. In addition, they set aside the first two seats on any bus for white passengers and the back bench for black passengers, while allowing anyone to sit on any of the rows in the middle. To comply with state segregation laws, blacks and whites were prohibited from sitting next to each other within this arrangement. Jemision's model of boycotting in Baton Rouge was adopted in 1955 by organizers of the year-long Montgomery bus boycott. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., wrote, Jemison's "painstaking description of the Baton Rouge experience proved invaluable."

While a number of boycotters wanted to continue the action to attack segregation directly, the majority approved the compromise.

Jemison was elected as president of the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.,  the largest black religious organization, in 1982 and served until 1994. His best-known achievement of his tenure as president of the National Baptist Convention was the construction of the Baptist World Center in Nashville, Tennessee. It is a headquarters for the Convention. He publicly opposed the nomination of Clarence Thomas, a conservative African American as an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court. He also objected to American intervention in the Gulf War.

Toward the end of his term as convention president, Jemison faced criticism because of his support for the boxer Mike Tyson, who was convicted in a rape case against a black woman. He was strongly criticized both by church members and observers.

Approaching the end of his tenure (a result of term limits), Jemison selected Dr. W. Franklyn Richardson as his successor, but Richardson was defeated by Dr. Henry Lyons at the 1994 convention.

Jemison filed a lawsuit to try to overturn the result. Eventually, through the appeals process, the election of Dr. Lyons was upheld. Jemison individually, as well as a co-plaintiff and their counsel, was ordered to pay $150,000 in punitive damages. By a later court order, Jemison and his co-plaintiff were required to pay the other side's attorney fees. The court found that Jemison had concocted evidence to justify the suit.

Jemison died in Baton Rouge at the age of ninety-five. His body lay in repose at the Louisiana State Capitol on November 22, 2013, the 50th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy.  Services were conducted on November 23 by the Reverend Dr. Rene F. Brown, formerly of Topeka, Kansas, and Jemison's successor pastor at Mt. Zion First Baptist Church in Baton Rouge.

Two Jewish Republican officeholders spoke at the funeral.  Lieutenant Governor Jay Dardenne said that despite national prominence, Jemison's most important role ... was as shepherd of this flock and this church." Attorney General Buddy Caldwell at the ceremony quoted Psalms 37:27: "the steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord." He likened Jemison's life to the Statue of Liberty: He "gave us a torch to light the way."

United States Representative Cedric Richmond, a Democrat from Louisiana's 2nd congressional district, based in New Orleans, described himself and other African-American legislators as "direct beneficiaries of the hard work, commitment, and courage of Dr. Jemison." Reading a statement of United States President Barack H. Obama, Richmond described Jemison as "part of the generation that challenged the conscience of our nation and moved us toward justice and equality for all."

Interment followed in Green Oaks Memorial Park in Baton Rouge.
From June 19 to  June 21, 2003, the 50th anniversary of the bus boycott and its participants were honored with a community forum and three days of events.  Organizers were Marc Sternberg, a 30-year-old resident, Southern University, Louisiana State University, and major organizations. Sternberg said, "Before Dr. King had a dream, before Rosa kept her seat, and before Montgomery took a stand, Baton Rouge played its part."
In 2007, Mt. Zion First Baptist Church established the annual T. J. Jemison Race Relations Award in his honor. It was first awarded that year to Jesse Bankston, a long-term Democratic politician in Baton Rouge.





About the Author

 Over the past 71 years, I have achieved some notable accomplishments.  Below are the links to some of the biographical listings that set forth those accomplishments. 

Marquis Who's Who Honors Everett W. Jenkins Jr. with Inclusion in Who's Who in the World


I feel very blessed to have been able to do as much as I have, but I feel that I have been "called" to do even more.  The creation of this blog is my response to that "calling".  I look forward to seeing what your response to that "calling" will be.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins
Fairfield, California 
November 28, 2021 
December 6, 2024
January 27, 2025
February 28, 2025
November 16, 2025
December 4, 2025

My Tribute

  The main notoriety I have achieved in this life is based upon my writing.  I have written six books (Pan-African Chronology [three volumes], The Muslim Diaspora [two volumes], and The Creation [one volume]) which achieved some notoriety, and I have begun several blogs (Biographies, The 100 Greatest Muslims, The Muslim CompendiumWho's Who in Islam and Words of Wisdomwhich have garnered additional notoriety.  However, whatever notoriety I have achieved for my writing has always seemed a bit undeserved.  Truth be told, I write not for notoriety, but for God.  In the coming days, I hope to be able to elaborate on why I do this.  However, suffice it to say that every book I write and every blog I begin, begins with a tribute to God.  I can only pray that God will continue to find what I write to be an expression of God's will.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins

Fairfield, California

November 28, 2021

December 6, 2024

January 27, 2025

February 28, 2025

November 16, 2025

The Algorithm of God and Terras Irradient

 For over ten years now I have been a rather prolific blogger.  For most of that time, I often wondered why I should pursue posting so many minor posts in so many varied areas instead of writing more reference books such as the six that I wrote from 1996 to 2003. After all, it seemed to me that my purpose in life was to write a Rainbow of Reference Books that would have been my lasting legacy.  However, with each passing year, that purpose seemed to be a fading dream.  And, as time went by, I began to question whether I was fulfilling the purpose that seemed to have been laid out for my life.

In September of 2024, I think I found the answer to my question.  I found the answer by performing a search on the Microsoft Bing search engine for "everett jenkins blogspot".  What the search engine revealed was page after page of some of the blog posts that I have written over the last ten years.  Truth be told, I have written thousands of posts in that period of time.  What the Microsoft Bing search engine did was to highlight the posts that seemed to me to be some of the most profound pieces that I have written. 

In many ways, I was humbled and amazed.  Since 1996, I have always attributed my writing to trying to do God's will.  Through the Microsoft Bing search engine algorithm, it would appear that I have received God's response to what I have done.

Simply remarkable!

Peace, 

Everett "Skip" Jenkins 
Fairfield, California
October 24, 2024
February 28, 2025
November 16, 2025

88888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888

After originally writing a post about "The Algorithm of God", it dawned on me that perhaps God was indeed helping me to comply with the words of Jesus that he spoke about in his "Sermon on the Mount" and to fulfill the motto of my college, "Terras Irradient".  Below is a post that explains my connection to Matthew 5:16 and why I feel so humbled by what I am observing now.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins
Fairfield, California
December 15, 2024 
February 28, 2025
November 16, 2025

88888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888

Every year, as part of my Easter and Christmas observances, I watch Franco Zeffirelli's beautiful portrayal of the Christ story, "Jesus of Nazareth"


For me, the highlight of the six-hour miniseries is not the birth of Jesus, nor the performance of the miracles, nor the Crucifixion, nor the Resurrection.  The highlight of the six-hour miniseries comes midway when Jesus is at the height of his ministry and delivers the Sermon on the Mount 


I do not know why, but every time I listen to this portion, a chill runs up my spine.

However, it is always afterwards that I become a little bit disappointed because I know that this portrayal of the Sermon on the Mount is not accurate.  After all, the Sermon on the Mount portrayed in Jesus of Nazareth only covers verses 1 through 12 of the Fifth Chapter of the Book of Matthew.  By doing so, it seems to me that perhaps the most important part of Jesus' message was left off. Thus, when I began the Black Alumni Weekend Memorial Service in 2011, I wanted to make sure that the most important part of the message for Amherst Alumni be said.  And so, at each Memorial Service I have someone read the following:

And seeing the multitudes, He went up on a mountain, and when He was seated His disciples came to Him. Then He opened His mouth and taught them, saying:

“Blessed are the poor in spirit,
For theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are those who mourn,
For they shall be comforted.
Blessed are the meek,
For they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
For they shall be filled.
Blessed are the merciful,
For they shall obtain mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart,
For they shall see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers,
For they shall be called sons of God.
10 Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake,
For theirs is the kingdom of heaven.

11 Blessed are you when they revile and persecute you and say all kinds of evil against you falsely for My sake. 

12 Rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in heaven, for so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

13 You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt loses its flavor, how shall it be seasoned? It is then good for nothing but to be thrown out and trampled underfoot by men.

14 You are the light of the world. A city that is set on a hill cannot be hidden. 15 Nor do they light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a lampstand, and it gives light to all who are in the house. 16 Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.

The Amherst College motto is "Terras Irradient" -- "Let Them Give Light To The World".  In my own way, through my many blogs, I strive to let my "light so shine before men, that they may see" my "good works and glorify" God and that by doing so I am able to comply with the Sermon on the Mount and with my alma mater's motto of giving Light unto the Lands.

Peace,

Everett "Skip" Jenkins
December 15, 2024
February 28, 2025
November 16, 2025

888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888

Terras irradient

“Let them give light to the world” • 1821

Amherst College educates students of exceptional potential from all backgrounds so that they may seek, value, and advance knowledge, engage the world around them, and lead principled lives of consequence.

Amherst brings together the most promising students, whatever their financial need, in order to promote diversity of experience and ideas within a purposefully small residential community. Working with faculty, staff, and administrators dedicated to intellectual freedom and the highest standards of instruction in the liberal arts, Amherst undergraduates assume substantial responsibility for undertaking inquiry and for shaping their education within and beyond the curriculum.

Amherst College is committed to learning through close colloquy and to expanding the realm of knowledge through scholarly research and artistic creation at the highest level. Its graduates link learning with leadership—in service to the College, to their communities, and to the world beyond.



2026 Index A

Aussaresses, Paul - A00007

Avery, James - A00012

2026 Index B

Baraka, Amiri - A00011

2026 Index C

Cordice, W. V. - A00009

2026 Index D

2026 Index E

2026 Index F

2026 Index G

 Guyse, Sheila - A00013

2026 Index H

 

2026 Index I

2026 Index J

2026 Index K

2026 Index L

 Lateef, Yusef - A00008

2026 Index M

 

Mandela, Nelson - A00003

McIntyre, Kalaparusha Maurice - A00002

Moore, Juanita - A00014

2026 Index N

Negm, Ahmed - A00004

2026 Index O

2026 Index P

2026 Index Q

2026 Index R

 Rochereau, Tabu Ley - A00005

2026 Index S

2026 Index T

 Tibbs, Delber - A00006

2026 Index U

2026 Index V

2026 Index W

 Wess, Frank - A00001

2026 Index X

2026 Index Y

2026 Index Z

A00146 - Betty Reid Soskin, Nation's Oldest Park Ranger

 8888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888

Betty Reid Soskin
Soskin in 2014
Born
Betty Charbonnet

September 22, 1921
DiedDecember 21, 2025 (aged 104)
EducationCastlemont High School
OccupationNational Park Service ranger
EmployerNational Park Service
Spouses
  • Melvin Reid
    (m. 1943; div. 1972)
  • William Soskin
    (m. 1978; died 1988)

8888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888

Betty Reid Soskin (née Charbonnet; September 22, 1921 – December 21, 2025) was an American ranger with the National Park Service, previously assigned to the Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front National Historical Park in Richmond, California.[1][2] Until her retirement on March 31, 2022, at the age of 100, she was the oldest serving National Park Ranger in the United States.[3]

Early life and education

Betty Charbonnet was born in DetroitMichigan on September 22, 1921, to Dorson Louis Charbonnet and Lottie Breaux Allen, both Catholics and natives of Louisiana. Her father came from a Creole background, and her mother from a Cajun background. Her great-grandmother had been born into slavery in 1846. She spent her early childhood living in New Orleans, until a hurricane and flood destroyed her family's home and business in 1927, when her family then relocated to Oakland, California.[4] She graduated from Castlemont High School in Oakland.[5]

Career

During World War II she worked as a file clerk for Boilermakers Union A-36, an all-black union auxiliary.[4] Her main job was filing change of address cards for the workers, who moved frequently.[6]

In June 1945, she and her then husband, Mel Reid, founded Reid's Records in Berkeley, California, a small black-owned business specializing in Gospel music. They moved to Walnut Creek, California in the 1950s, where their children attended better public schools and an alternative private elementary and middle school called Pinel. The family encountered considerable racism, and she and her husband were subject to death threats after they built a home in the white suburb.[4] The store closed in 2019.[7][8]

She converted to Unitarianism and became active in the Mount Diablo Unitarian Universalist Church and the Black Caucus of the Unitarian Universalist Association,[9] and in the 1960s became a well-known songwriter in the Civil Rights Movement.[4]

Reid's Records in Berkeley, California, 2014

She was divorced from Mel Reid in 1972, and subsequently married William Soskin, a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley. In 1978, after Mel Reid's health and finances had declined, she took over management of the music store, which led to her becoming active in area civic matters and a prominent community activist.[10]

She later served as a field representative for California State Assemblywomen Dion Aroner and Loni Hancock, and in those positions became actively involved in the early planning stages and development of a park to memorialize the role of women on the Home Front during World War II. Those efforts came to fruition when Rosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front National Historical Park was established in 2000, to provide a site where future generations could remember the contributions women made to the war effort.

The Rosie Memorial in Rosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front National Historical ParkRichmond, California

Reflecting on her own role in planning for the park's creation, and on how she brought her personal recollections of the conditions for African American women working in that still segregated environment to bear on the planning efforts, she has said that, often, she "was the only person in the room who had any reason to remember that ... what gets remembered is a function of who's in the room doing the remembering."[4]

In 2003, she left her state job and became a consultant at the park she helped create before becoming a park ranger with the National Park Service in 2007 at the age of 85.[11]

Soskin's duties included conducting park tours and serving as an interpreter, explaining the park's purpose, history, various sites, and museum collections to park visitors. She has been celebrated as "a tireless voice for making sure the African-American wartime experience – both the positive steps toward integration and the presence of discrimination – has a prominent place in the Park's history."[12]

Soskin said in 2015, at the age of 93: "Wish I'd had [the] confidence when the young Betty needed it to navigate through the hazards of everyday life on the planet. But maybe I'm better able to benefit from having it now – when I have the maturity to value it and the audacity to wield it for those things held dear."[13]

She released her memoir, Sign My Name to Freedom, in February 2018. A feature-length documentary about Soskin's involvement with music, also titled Sign My Name to Freedom, began filming in 2016.[14]

Retirement and death

Soskin had a stroke while working at the park in September 2019 and returned to work in a limited, informal capacity in January 2020.[15][16][17] She retired from the National Park Service on March 31, 2022, as the oldest serving park ranger.[18]

Soskin died at her home in Richmond, on the morning of December 21, 2025, at the age of 104.[19]

Honors and legacy

Reid Soskin receiving a congressional recognition from Mark DeSaulnier in 2020.

In celebration of her 100th birthday on September 22, 2021, the West Contra Costa Unified School District renamed Juan Crespi Middle School to Betty Reid Soskin Middle School.[5][25][26][27]

A stage musical based on her life, Sign My Name to Freedom by Michael Gene Sullivan with songs by Soskin, was premiered by San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Company in March 2024.[28][29]

References

  1.  Zinko, Carolyne (September 26, 2007). "WWII meant opportunity for many women, oppression for others"San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 23, 2011.
  2.  Hildebrand, Lee (January 31, 2010). "Ranger's voice spans East Bay history"San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved March 23, 2011.
  3.  Jones, Carolyn (October 16, 2013). "Federal shutdown puts Betty Reid Soskin on hold"San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  4.  "Oldest National Park Ranger Shares 'What Gets Remembered'," NPR Wisdom Watch, May 15, 2014.[1]
  5.  "Betty Reid Soskin, Groundbreaking Park Ranger, to Have East Bay Middle School Renamed in Her Honor"KQED. June 24, 2021. Retrieved June 24, 2021.
  6.  Pope, John (November 19, 2016) [May 29, 2016]. "World War II Museum to honor park ranger, 94, for telling the truth about racism"nola.com. Archived from the original on October 19, 2018.
  7.  Jones, Kevin L. (February 5, 2019). "Reid's Records, California's oldest record shop, to close in the fall"BerkeleysideBerkeley, California. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  8.  Millner, Caille (March 2, 2019) [February 15, 2019]. "Datebook: Reid's Records in Berkeley singing its swan song after nearly 75 years"San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 1, 2025.
  9.  "Betty Reid Soskin"Williams College. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
  10.  Frankel, Bruce (2010). What Should I Do With the Rest of My Life?: True Stories of Finding Success, Passion, and New Meaning in the Second Half of LifePenguin BooksISBN 978-1-101-18596-4.
  11.  "Betty Soskin A Living Monument To WWII History"The Washington Post. June 12, 2015.
  12.  Geluardi, John (July 30, 2007). "Park celebrates women's war effort: 'Rosie the Riveter' symbol of those who transcended traditional roles"Oakland Tribune. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  13.  Personal blog, May 26, 2015.
  14.  Sobotta, Sharon K. (January 11, 2023). "Sign My Name to Freedom"East Bay Express. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
  15.  Sanchez, Tatiana (September 22, 2019). "Betty Reid Soskin, 98-year-old park ranger, recovering from stroke"San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved October 22, 2019.
  16.  Tyska, Jane (January 16, 2020). "Betty Reid Soskin back at work at Rosie the Riveter park after stroke"East Bay Times.
  17.  Reneau, Annie (March 3, 2020). "98-yr-old Betty Reid Soskin is America's oldest park ranger and an inspiration for us all"Upworthy. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  18.  "100 year-old National park Service Ranger Betty Reid Soskin retires after remarkable career" (Press release). National Park Service. March 31, 2022.
  19.  Hemmila, Soren (December 21, 2025). "Betty Reid Soskin, nation's oldest park ranger and civil rights pioneer, dies at 104". Grandview Independent. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
  20.  "Oldest park ranger gets new coin after home robbery"KCRA. July 18, 2016.
  21.  "Recognizing Ms. Betty Reid Soskin"Congressional Record162 (107): 49. July 5, 2016.
  22.  "Awards and Recognition"National Parks Conservation Association.
  23.  "Recognizing Betty Reid Soskin"Congressional Record165 (167): 10. October 22, 2019.
  24.  DeSaulnier, Mark (February 8, 2020). "Recognizing Betty Reid Soskin".
  25.  Page, Sydney (September 24, 2021). "She became a park ranger at 85 to tell her story of segregation. Now 100, she's the oldest active ranger"The Washington Post.
  26.  "East Bay District Names School After Betty Reid Soskin on Her 100th Birthday"NBC Bay Area. September 22, 2021.
  27.  LaBerge, Beth; Marnette Federis (September 22, 2021). "East Bay Middle School Renamed for Pioneering Park Ranger Betty Reid Soskin — on Her 100th Birthday"KQED.
  28.  Zack, Jessica (March 27, 2024). "'Sign My Name to Freedom' celebrates the unheard songs of 102-year-old Betty Reid Soskin"San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 1, 2025.
  29.  Chávez, David John (April 2, 2024) [March 30, 2024]. "Datebook Review: The profound life and scintillating music of Betty Reid Soskin shine in 'Sign My Name to Freedom'"San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 1, 2025.

Sources

88888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888

Betty Reid Soskin, Nation’s Oldest Park Ranger, Dies at 104

She began working as a park ranger at age 85, educating visitors about the women and people of color who served on the home front in World War II, herself among them.

Listen to this article · 7:31 min Learn more
A woman wearing a hat and a vest stands next to a map.
Betty Reid Soskin at the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historical Park in Richmond, Calif. She became a ranger at the park at the age of 85.Credit...Ben Margot/Associated Press

Betty Reid Soskin, the National Park Service’s oldest active ranger, who helped shape the creation of a park honoring the millions of workers in World War II defense jobs, among them women like her who persevered while facing racial discrimination, died on Sunday at her home in Richmond, Calif. She was 104.

Her death was confirmed in a statement that her family posted on her social media account.

In 1942, when women joined the war effort by working in the defense industry and other related roles, as portrayed in “Rosie the Riveter” posters, Ms. Soskin sought to do her part in the Bay Area by seeking work at the boilermakers’ union, which supplied much of the shipbuilding work force in the port of Richmond, across the bay from San Francisco. But the union, which was segregated, relegated her and the other Black women in its ranks to its auxiliary wing.

And so, for the rest of the war, Ms. Soskin sorted index cards at the union hall in the city, miles from the bustling yards that sent warships to the Pacific, a task that left her feeling humiliated. “I never had a sense of being anyone other than pushing papers,” she told The San Francisco Chronicle in 2007. “I wasn’t even always sure who the enemy was.”

But she was able to draw on her World War II experiences in later years. In 2000, while working as an aide to Dion Aroner, a California assemblywoman, she landed a seat at the table in planning for the launch of the Rosie the Riveter/WWII Home Front National Historical Park in Richmond.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

“I was the only person of color in the room,” Ms. Soskin told Newsweek in 2020. “And as I began to introduce my part of the work, it was very clear that many of the stories of Richmond during the war were not being told.”

Image
A woman wearing a hat looks into the distance to her right.
Ms. Soskin would often wear her ranger uniform when off duty. “I am making every little girl of color aware of a career choice she may not have known she had,” she said.Credit...Eric Risberg/Associated Press

Ms. Soskin was made a consultant to the park in 2003 and signed on as a ranger there in 2007, when she was 85.

She took visitors on narrated bus trips and shared the history of the park’s many sites, and was remembered especially for the talks she gave at the park’s theater, where she recounted the lives of people of color who faced racial discrimination at home during the war.

“Because of Betty, we made sure we had African American scholars review our films and exhibits,” Tom Leatherman, the park’s superintendent, told Glamour in 2018, when the magazine named Ms. Soskin as woman of the year in the field of culture. “We also made sure we were looking out for other, often forgotten stories — Japanese American, Latino American, American Indian, and L.G.B.T.Q. narratives — that were equally important.”

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

In addition to her own wartime experiences, Ms. Soskin told of how thousands of people of Japanese heritage living on the West Coast, many of them American citizens, had been transported by the government to inland internment camps.

In 2009, Ms. Soskin was invited by her congressman, George Miller, as a guest on the National Mall to witness President Barack Obama’s inauguration. In 2015, she introduced Mr. Obama during the nationally televised Christmas tree lighting in Washington, where he presented her with a commemorative coin stamped with the presidential seal.

On that evening, as was often the case, she carried in her pocket a photograph of her great-grandmother, Leontine Breaux Allen, who was born into slavery.

“Here I was with my great-grandmother in my breast pocket and with the first African-American president of the United States,” Ms. Soskin told The New Orleans Times-Picayune. “It was sheer poetry. What could be more American than that?”

Betty Charbonnet was born on Sept. 22, 1921, in Detroit, where her family lived briefly before returning to their home in New Orleans. Her father, Dorson Louis Charbonnet, who, like his father, worked as a builder. Her mother, Lottie Breaux Allen, had African, French and Spanish roots.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

The family moved to the San Francisco Bay Area when Betty was 6 after a devastating flood ravaged their home in New Orleans.

After graduating from high school, Betty married Mel Reid, and in 1945 they founded Reid’s Records in Berkeley, one of the first Black-owned record shops in California, selling jazz, gospel and rhythm and blues recordings. Mel and his uncle, Paul Reid, became highly successful music promoters.

While raising their four children in the mostly white Berkeley suburb of Walnut Creek, Ms. Soskin and her husband encountered racial hostility and received death threats.

In the late 1960s, Ms. Soskin held fund-raisers through the Unitarian Universalist Church to support the Black Panthers and delivered the proceeds to Kathleen and Eldridge Cleaver, two of the group’s central figures. She was a delegate to the 1972 Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach that nominated Senator George McGovern of South Dakota to face President Richard M. Nixon in what became Nixon’s election to a second term.

Ms. Soskin also wrote songs in the 1960s and ’70s, performing them on her guitar throughout the Bay Area.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Ms. Soskin and Mr. Reid divorced in 1972, and she married William Soskin, a psychology professor at the University of California, Berkeley. That marriage also ended in divorce. She took over management of Reid’s Records in 1978 after her first husband’s health declined.

Working to revive the record store’s fortunes, Ms. Soskin pressured Berkeley City Hall to clean up the drug problem that had overtaken Sacramento Street, where Reid’s Records was located.

That led to her working in City Hall herself, as a legislative aide to a council member, Don Jelinek. She also worked with Berkeley’s mayor at the time, Gus Newport, to help build low-income housing. (The record store closed in 2019.)

Image
The cover of a book says “Sign My Name to Freedom,” and features three pictures of a woman.
Ms. Soskin’s blog became the basis for a memoir, “Sign My Name to Freedom.”Credit...Hay House Inc.

In 2003, she learned to use a computer and began a blog, which became a basis for her memoir, “Sign My Name to Freedom” (2018), edited by her cousin J. Douglas Allen-Taylor, a journalist and author.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Ms. Soskin recalled a searing episode in the 1950s when she entered a suburban diner in the Walnut Hill area with three of her children around 5 p.m.

“After a very long time, the waitress came over,” she wrote. “She announced with a grin, ‘You’ll have to get out of here. We’re closing.’ The rest of the customers had gone silent. Some were also obviously enjoying my misery. It was the dinner hour. The place could not be closing.”

Ms. Soskin returned with her children to her car. “This was before the passage of the Civil Rights Act and the establishment of racially shared restrooms and drinking fountains,” she wrote, “but this was not Mississippi, but California. How could this be?”

Information on survivors was not immediately available.

Image
A woman with a party dress and earrings stands before a white background.
Ms. Soskin in 2018, when she was named a woman of the year by Glamour magazine.Credit...Evan Agostini/Invision/Associated Press

As she approached her 100th birthday, Ms. Soskin continued to work, returning to the job after a stroke in 2019, although on a reduced schedule via video conference. Three years earlier, she had sustained injuries when a burglar attacked her in her apartment in the middle of the night.

Even off duty, Ms. Soskin was devoted to wearing her ranger uniform.

“When I’m on the streets or on an escalator or elevator, I am making every little girl of color aware of a career choice she may not have known she had,” Ms. Soskin said in a 2015 interview with the Department of the Interior. “The pride is evident in their eyes.”