Joseph W. Summers

Joseph W. Summers (March 8, 1930 – June 6, 1991) was a funeral director, community leader and Democrat who represented Indianapolis in the Indiana House of Representatives from 1977 until his death.[1]

Joseph W. Summers
Member of the Indiana House of Representatives
from the 45th district
In office
January, 1977  January, 1982
Serving with William Crawford, John Day
Preceded byJulia Carson
Succeeded byn/a
Member of the Indiana House of Representatives
from the 51st district
In office
January, 1982  January, 1991
Serving with William Crawford, John Day
Member of the Indiana House of Representatives
from the 99th district
In office
1990  June 6, 1991
Preceded byn/a
Succeeded byVanessa Summers
Personal details
Born(1930-03-08)March 8, 1930
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
DiedJune 6, 1991(1991-06-06) (aged 61)
Indianapolis, Indiana
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse(s)Joyce Benson
Alma materIndiana Academy of Mortuary Science
Indiana University
OccupationFuneral home director

Background

Born during the Great Depression, Joseph W. Summers was educated in the Indianapolis public schools. After graduating from Crispus Attucks High School (when it was the only secondary school open to African Americans in the city), he attended the Indiana Academy of Mortuary Science, and graduated with an associate degree. He then attended Indiana University and graduated. In 1948, he married Joyce Benson, who had graduated from Crispus Attucks High School that year, and would survive him by decades (dying in 2014). They had daughters Natalie and Vanessa Summers, who survived them and had children.

Career

In 1962, Summers established the Summers Funeral Chapels, and became a leading local businessman, serving both African American and white families in central Indianapolis. He was a member of the local Better Business Bureau (later becoming a director), African Methodist Episcopal Church, Freemasons (Fidelity Masonic Lodge #55) and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, as well as county, state, and national funeral directors and morticians associations, and a board member of the Alpha Home for the Aged. His wife also became an active business owner, operating "Lucille's Flowers" for four decades.[2]

Summers became active politically, first as a precinct committeeman in 1952, then as Democratic ward leader. He also served from 1967 until 1978 as Marion County chief deputy coroner and on the Indianapolis Board of Public Safety from 1965-68.[3]

When fellow Democrat and neighbor Julia Carson decided to run (successfully) for election to the state senate in 1976, Summers ran for her seat in 100th Indiana General Assembly, representing the then 3-member 45th district.[4] He would win re-election multiple times (initially serving alongside fellow Democrats William Crawford and John Day in what became the 51st district following the 1980 census), including after Indiana switched to single-member districts following the 1990 census (when Summers won in the 99th district). Thus, Summers represented central Indianapolis for fifteen years, until his death in mid-1991.[5][6]

Known to members of both political parties for his cordiality and accessibility, Summers rose to become chairman of the House Committee on Public Policy, Veterans Affairs and Ethics, and used his position to promote civility in legislative affairs, not only scheduling many hearings, but thwarting rancorous legislation concerning abortion and even Democratic governor Evan Bayh's proposal to strengthen legislation concerning drunk driving (as likely to lead to police harassment of civilians).[7] He served as Assistant Minority Caucus Chair from 1978 until 1980.[8]

Death and legacy

Summers suffered from cancer in his final years and died on June 6, 1991. Survived by his wife, daughters and grandchildren, he was buried at historic Crown Hill Cemetery in Indianapolis.[9] His daughters continued to operate the funeral homes, then merged them with other local mortuaries in 2002 and 2016. "Lavenia & Summers" still operates funeral homes in Indianapolis.[10][11]

After Indianapolis refurbished an important bridge in the Indianapolis Park and Boulevard System (leading Meridian Street across Falls Creek and linking central Indianapolis with residential areas north of town, including those in the historic Bottoms neighborhood long the heart of the city's African American community and now known as Center Township), Indianapolis renamed it to honor Summers in 1991. A historical marker honoring his civic achievements dates from 1995.[12]

gollark: You need the PIN and card, but I don't know if there's anything stopping it from displaying "please authorize a £10 transaction" then actually *making* a £100 one.
gollark: Real payment systems partly get around this by making the chip on the card itself do some cryptography, so it can't make payments without the card being physically there still, but I don't think there's actually anything other than trust, the law, and "security" through obscurity stopping a payment thing from deducting more money than it should?
gollark: Obviously that's not very good.
gollark: .
gollark: Example issue with the central version: you scan your card on a payment terminal to pay one currency unit. But it reads your card's data off, and can now just take as much money as it wants at any time

References

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