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Background
Name: Cynthia
Birthday: August 15
Gender: Female
Status: Single
Religion: Christian/Protestant
Location:
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
United States
School:
Bowling Green State University (PhD, Rhetoric and Writing, 2004): Nazareth College of Kalamazoo (M.Ed in secondary education and writing, 1988)
California State University, Fullerton (BA in English, 1979)
Fullerton Junior College: Adams State College: Grand Rapids Community College
Work:
Instructor of writing and women's studies, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, 2001-present
Owens Community College, Findlay, OH, 2000-2001
Grand Valley State University, Allendale, MI, 1990-2000
North Kent Community Education, Grand Rapids, MI, 1993-1994
South Kent Community Education, Cutlerville, MI, 1992-1993
Tri-County Community Education, Sand Lake and Howard City, MI, 1988-1992
Hometown(s):
Galion, OH (birthplace)
Mansfield, OH
Youngstown, OH
Dayton, OH
Cuyahoga Falls, OH
Anaheim, CA
Orange, CA
Fullerton, CA
Monte Vista, CO
Pasadena, CA
Downey, CA
Grand Rapids, MI
Bowling Green, OH
Home is where the heart is
Quote:
"When I dare to be powerful--to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid." -- Audre Lorde, 1934-1992

The passing of a lesbian pioner, Del Martin

>San Francisco Chronicle: Lesbian rights pioneer Del Martin dies

> 

>Rachel Gordon, Chronicle Staff Writer

> 

>(08-27) 14:57 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- Del Martin, a lesbian rights pioneer

>who took part in one of California’s first same-sex weddings, died

>today in San Francisco after a long period of declining health. She was

>87.

> 

>Ms. Martin’s political activism began more than five decades ago when

>in 1955 she co-founded a ground-breaking lesbian rights organization,

>Daughters of Bilitis, named after a book of lesbian love poetry. On

>June 16, she and her partner of 55 years, Phyllis Lyon, were married at

>San Francisco City Hall by Mayor Gavin Newsom.

> 

>"Her last act of activism was her most personal - marrying the love of

>her life," said Kate Kendell, a long-time friend of the couple and

>executive director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights.

> 

>Ms. Martin died this morning at UCSF Hospice, nearly two weeks after

>she was admitted with a broken arm.

> 

>"Ever since I met Del 55 years ago, I could never imagine a day would

>come when she wouldn’t be by my side," Lyon said in a statement issued

>by the National Center for Lesbian Rights. "I am so lucky to have known

>her, loved her and been her partner in all things.

> 

>"I also never imagined there would be a day that we would actually be

>able to get married," Lyon said. "I am devastated, but I take some

>solace in knowing we were able to enjoy the ultimate rite of love and

>commitment before she passed."

> 

>Ms. Martin had been in ailing health for some time, weakened to the

>point where she was pushed in a wheelchair to her wedding ceremony.

>In an interview in her hillside Noe Valley home just days before she

>wed, Ms. Martin described as fortunate the timing of the California

>Supreme Court decision that gave gays and lesbians the right to marry.

> 

>"We’re not getting younger," she said.

> 

>Ms. Martin and Lyon were plaintiffs in the lawsuit that got the state

>ban on same-sex marriage lifted. They were married minutes after the

>ruling took effect.

> 

>Four years ago, when San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom allowed marriage

>licenses to be issued to gay and lesbian couples in San Francisco in

>defiance of state law, Ms. Martin and Lyon were the first of some 4,000

>same-sex couples to wed. Those marriages were later nullified by the

>state’s high court but paved the way for the successful legal

>challenge.

> 

>"We would never have marriage equality in California if it weren’t for

>Del and Phyllis," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the San Francisco

>Democrat. "They fought and triumphed in many battles, beginning when

>they first bought a home together in San Francisco in

1955."

> 

>Pelosi called the death of Ms. Martin "a great loss for me personally

>and for our entire community."

> 

>Newsom, who said Ms. Martin "laid the groundwork for all those who want

>a life of dignity," ordered the flags at City Hall and the rainbow

>gay-pride flag on Market Streets to be flown at half-staff until sunset

>Thursday.

> 

>Ms. Martin’s activist reach extended into the feminist movement, when

>she became the first open lesbian to serve on the board of directors of

>the National Organization of Women, and she helped spearhead a

>successful campaign to get the American Psychiatric Association to

>remove homosexuality from its roster of mental

illnesses.

> 

>In 1995, Sen. Dianne Feinstein named her as a delegate to the White

>House Conference on Aging, where she and Lyon, a delegate appointed by

>Pelosi, focused attention on the needs of aging gays and lesbians.

> 

>Ms. Martin, whose given name was Dorothy but who went by Del, was born

>in San Francisco on May 5, 1921. Her first marriage, at age 19, was

>brief, but produced a daughter, Kendra Mon, who lives in Petaluma. She

>is also survived by two grandchildren.

> 

>Friends and family plan to hold a public tribute to Ms. Martin in the

>near future. Details have not been set.

> 

>E-mail Rachel Gordon at rgordon@sfchronicle.com.

> 

>http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/08/27/BAGI12JDIS.DT

> 

 

mahaffc says:
PipPop,
Thank you for your kind words. She was a true pioneer to the whole lesbian community and she and her partner showed a level of commitment in their many years together that is rarely matched.

Blessings,
Posted: November 7, 2008 4:18PM EST
pippop120 says:
I find it truely amazing that one person can span so much change in a lifetime. I celebrate Ms. Martin's life for also working to create that much change in a lifetime. Thank you for posting the article
Posted: September 9, 2008 7:40PM EDT
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