Moranda Smith

Moranda Smith was a black labor organizer and unionist who served as the first regional director of Winston-Salem, North Carolina's local 22 of the Food, Tobacco, Agricultural and Allied Workers of America (FTA) in the 1930 and 1940s.

Career

Born of a sharecropping family in South Carolina, Smith led thousands of Winston-Salem workers to win $1,250,000 in back pay in the leaf houses and stemmeries. In 1943, after a Black worker fell dead at a Reynolds Tobacco Company plant, Smith, along with thousands of other Black women, participated in a spontaneous sit-down leading to a massive walkout forcing Reynolds to temporarily shut down.

Her leadership at the local 22 saw a 50% rise of minimum wages. The union also increased voter registration in the area, leading to the election of the first Black alderman in the South. Throughout her career as a unionist, Smith worked extensively, "openly defying" the Ku Klux Klan.[1]

Personal life

Smith died in 1950 at the age of 34, "the strain of her activities seeming to be a major cause."[2]

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References

  1. Davis, Marianna W. (1982). Contributions of Black Women to America Volume II. Columbia, South Carolina: Kenday Press, Inc. pp. 123, 124.
  2. Lerner, Gerda (1972). Black Women in White America. New York: Pantheon Books. p. 257.
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