Flo Kennedy--black feminist from way before the 70s
I was going to add this to the thread on black women in progressive spaces, but this giant of a woman really deserves an OP.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florynce_Kennedy
In the 1970s Kennedy traveled the lecture circuit with writer Gloria Steinem. If a man asked the pair if they were lesbians a stereotype of feminists at the time Kennedy would quote Ti-Grace Atkinson and answer, "Are you my alternative?"[5] She was an early member of the National Organization for Women, but left then in 1970, dissatisfied with their approach to change. In 1971 she founded the Feminist Party, which nominated Shirley Chisholm for president. She also helped found the Women's Political Caucus. Beginning in 1972 she served on the Advisory Board of the Westbeth Playwrights Feminist Collective, a New York City theatre group which produced plays on feminist issues.
Kennedy is known for her pro-choice activism on abortion, writing a book with Diane Schulder called Abortion Rap. Kennedy is sometimes claimed to have coined the phrase "If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament," although Gloria Steinem attributed it to "an old Irish woman taxi driver in Boston," who she said she and Kennedy met.[6] In 1972, Kennedy filed tax evasion charges with the Internal Revenue Service against the Catholic Church, saying that their campaign against abortion rights violated the separation of church and state.
On the side of civil rights, Kennedy established the Media Workshop in 1966 to picket and lobby the media over their representation of Black people. She stated that she would lead boycotts of major advertisers if they didn't feature black people in their ads. She attended all three Black Power conferences and represented H. Rap Brown and the Black Panthers.
http://www.msmagazine.com/summer2011/verbalkarate.asp
Like many people all over the country, I knew a little about the Flo Kennedy legend long before I met her in the flesh. In fact, the name Flo alone was enough to evoke images of outrageous and creative troublemaking in almost any area, from minority hiring to ban-the-bomb. Just as there was only one Eleanor or Winston, one Stokely or Marilyn or Mao, there was only one Flo.
Of course, her fame was more limited. But for those who had been in the Black Movement when it was still known as Civil Rights, or in the Consumer Movement that predated Ralph Nader, or in the Womens Movement when it was still supposed to be a few malcontents in sneakers, or in the Peace Movement when there was more worry about nuclear fallout than Vietnam, Flo was a political touchstonea catalyst in the lives of people who knew her, and a source of curiosity for those who did not.