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Sat, 04.04.1903

Marvel Cooke, Writer, Teacher, and Activist born

Marvel Cooke

*Marvel Cooke was born on this date in 1903. She was a Black journalist, writer, and activist.

Marvel Jackson, the daughter of Amy Wood Jackson and Madison Jackson, was born in Mankato, Minnesota. Her family moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 1907, and in 1925, Jackson graduated from the University of Minnesota at 22. When she left college, she moved to Harlem in New York City and was hired as an editorial assistant at the Crisis, the NAACP publication. Jackson then went to the Amsterdam News, where she was secretary to the women's editor and a general assignment reporter.

While at the Amsterdam News, Jackson helped organize the first Newspaper Guild unit at a Black-owned newspaper and was the first woman reporter in the Amsterdam News’ 40-year history. She broke her engagement to Roy Wilkins and Married Cecil Cooke, an internationally famous athlete. The Cooke's moved to Greensboro, North Carolina, where Marvel taught history, English, and Latin in the high school department of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College. Moving back to New York City, she returned to the Amsterdam News. In 1935, she was part of the successful eleven-week Guild strike against the newspaper. She became assistant managing editor at the People's Voice, a Harlem-based weekly owned by Adam Clayton Powell Sr.

"I was part of the Bronx Slave Market long enough to experience all the viciousness and indignity of a system which forces women to the streets in search of work," she once said. Her five-part series for the Daily Compass on the abuse suffered by Black domestic workers was a result of this research. Cooke also worked as a reporter and feature writer at the Compass, a short-lived white-owned New York City Daily newspaper.

She was the only Black woman reporter and the first woman to work at a mainstream white-owned newspaper. Cooke loved immersing herself in the arts. She read, listened to music, studied art, and went to plays. She felt that Black people in the arts contributed things that were lacking in the regular arts because Black people's stories, art, and music reflected their life experiences.

In the early fifties, Cooke devoted herself to political activism. 1953, she was the New York director of the Council of Arts, Sciences, and Professions. She appeared before a hearing instigated by Sen. Joseph McCarthy in New York and Washington, D.C., defending HUAC accusations. Cooke was the national legal defense secretary of the Angela Davis Defense Committee in the late sixties and early seventies. Her husband died in 1978. Later, she was the national vice chairman of the American-Soviet Friendship Committee. Marvel Cooke died in December 2000 in Harlem, N.Y.

To be a Writer

to be a Journalist or Reporter

Reference:

CPUSA.org

MNopedia.org

Minnesota Historical Society
345 W. Kellogg Blvd.
Saint Paul, MN 55102-1906

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