Celebration Planned Friday, August 21 @ 7 P.M.
BOSTON & DURHAM, N.C.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
The Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice and Iron
Mountain Incorporated (NYSE: IRM), the storage and information
management company, are excited to announce a new partnership to
transform the childhood home of Pauli Murray into a national historic
site. With the partnership, Iron Mountain will provide a financial
contribution to preserve the foundation of the home as well as moving
forward with exterior renovations that are currently threatened by lack
of maintenance, demolition, neglect and water damage.
A ceremony celebrating this partnership is planned for August 21, 2015
at 6 p.m. ET at the opening of an exhibition, Pauli Murray: Imp,
Crusader, Dude, Priest in the Cameron Gallery at The
Scrap Exchange, 2050 Chapel Hill Road in Durham, North Carolina. The
Pauli Murray house was designated a National
Treasure in March 2015 by the National Trust for Historic
Preservation.
“We’re pleased to support the Pauli Murray Center in their mission to
preserve Pauli’s important historical contributions,” said Ty Ondatje,
Iron Mountain’s senior vice president of Corporate Responsibility and
Chief Diversity Officer. “Our Living Legacy Initiative gives us the
opportunity to extend our charitable mission to non-profit
organizations, like the Pauli Murray Center, that share our vision for
cultural and historical preservation. We passionately believe that
everyone deserves equal access to the ideas and artifacts that compose
our human experience, regardless of economic or geographic barriers, and
we’re honored to be able to play a part in helping the Center preserve
her childhood home and educate future generations about Pauli Murray’s
legacy.”
The Rev. Dr. Pauli Murray, 1910-1985, was an accomplished American
activist who believed in justice, reconciliation, and freedom. She
championed the cause of human rights through her work as an author,
educator, lawyer, feminist, poet and priest.
“Pauli Murray is an American hero whose life story is inspiring to
everyone who believes in human rights for all,” says Mayme Webb-Bledsoe,
board chair of the Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice,
“and we are thrilled to be partnering with Iron Mountain to save her
childhood home and advance her vision for equality and reconciliation.”
She grew up with her grandparents Robert and Cornelia Fitzgerald on
Carroll Street in Durham. As a mixed race woman growing up in the
segregated South, she encountered injustice and learned from her family
how to combat it. “The ideals and influences within my own family had
made me a life-long fighter against all forms of inequality and
injustice.” -- Pauli Murray, Proud Shoes: The Story of an American
Family. Murray worked tirelessly in the struggle to achieve equal
rights for African Americans and for women. She sat down on buses and
sat in at lunch counters in the 1940s. She penned the memorandum sent to
the US Congress advocating for women’s rights in the 1964 Civil Rights
Act.
Murray’s family valued education. She earned law degrees from Howard,
Yale and the University of California and in 1951 she wrote The
States' Law on Race and Color, which Thurgood Marshall called the
Bible for civil rights lawyers. She was an advisor and friend to Eleanor
Roosevelt and was appointed by Kennedy to his President's Commission on
the Status of Women Committee on Civil and Political Rights in 1961.
Murray co-authored “Jane Crow and the Law: Sex Discrimination and Title
VII” in 1965 and cofounded the National Organization for Women (NOW) in
1966.
Pauli Murray published two autobiographical books, the path breaking
1956 Proud Shoes: The Story of An American Family and the 1987 Song
in a Weary Throat: An American Pilgrimage. A poet, she also
published Dark Testament and Other Poems in 1970.
At age 62, Pauli Murray entered seminary seeking ordination and in 1977
she was the first African-American woman to be ordained as an Episcopal
priest. She offered communion for the first time at the Chapel of the
Cross in Chapel Hill 123 years after her grandmother had been baptized
there as a slave.
About the Pauli Murray Center for History & Social
Justice
The Pauli Murray Center for History and Social
Justice lifts up the life and legacy of activist, scholar, feminist,
poet, attorney, and priest Pauli Murray. We are developing a historic
site at Murray’s childhood home where we will actively work, through our
programming and operations to increase engagement across divisions such
as race, class, sexual & gender identity, and spiritual practice to
address enduring inequities and injustice in our local, national, and
global communities. Visit http://www.paulimurraycenter.org
for more information.
About Iron Mountain
Iron Mountain
Incorporated (NYSE: IRM) is a leading provider of storage and
information management services. The company’s real estate network of
over 67 million square feet across more than 1,000 facilities in 36
countries allows it to serve customers with speed and accuracy. And its
solutions for records
management, data
management, document
management, and secure
shredding help organizations to lower storage costs, comply with
regulations, recover from disaster, and better use their information for
business advantage. Founded in 1951, Iron Mountain stores and protects
billions of information assets, including business documents, backup
tapes, electronic files and medical data. Visit www.ironmountain.com
for more information.

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Source: Iron Mountain, Inc.