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Published: Jan 11, 2009 12:30 AM
Modified: Jan 11, 2009 02:02 AM
Hundreds gather to honor Clark
Noted local public servant died on Jan. 3
More than 800 people remembered Rebecca Clark on Friday as a matriarch, a public servant and an unofficial office-holder in Chapel Hill and Carrboro.The retired nurse and tireless political organizer died Jan. 3 at age 93.A who's who of elected officials graced the stage and filled out the audience at Chapel Hill Bible Church for her funeral. North Carolina House Speaker Joe Hackney, former Chapel Hill Mayor Howard Lee and U.S. Rep. David Price, through his wife Lisa, all talked of needing Clark's support to get elected."Rebecca Clark held powerful office in this community," Hackney said. "She earned this universal respect in this community with a lifetime of helping others."Clark fought for workers' rights at UNC, drove voters to the polls on Election Day, and offered the downtrodden a hand up, according to Clark's former pastors and other community leaders.The Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP recognized Clark as a community organizer who left footprints for generations to follow, checking voter lists at her Lincoln Center precinct every hour last Nov. 4 to make sure her friends and family were voting."[President-elect Barack Obama] stood on the shoulders of hundreds of thousands of other organizers like Mrs. Clark," said an NAACP resolution.Clark was a Democratic activist and a big Obama supporter, but her main political work was just making sure people voted."You got two or three phone calls on voting day, 'Did you vote?'" said her grandson, Doug Clark Jr. "You had to come by and show that early voting sticker."Mrs. Clark was buried in Chapel Hill Cemetery next to her son Doug Clark Sr., leader of the touring band the Hot Nuts.Local jeweler Ken Jackson repeated a story he had told at Clark's 91st birthday roast, which raised money for the St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church building fund.He said as a child living off Jones Ferry Road in Chatham County, Clark would walk miles to a home located where the PTA Thrift Shop now sits, wash her feet with well water and put on her shoes. Jackson said that was a sign of respect for others and for herself."I see Ms. Rebecca in the spirit world with an angel washing her feet so that she can enter heaven," Jackson said.Lee likewise connected Clark's earthly life with a heavenly image."Now that she can walk on streets paved with gold, we must remember that she worked hard to get streets paved with tar here in Chapel Hill and Carrboro," said Lee, the South's first black mayor. "It's possible that I never would have been elected mayor of Chapel Hill without her work, engagement and support."Clark's friend Rose Bynum, who attend St. Paul African Methodist Episcopal Church with her, said Clark expressed her faith by being "a friend of man" as expressed in her favorite poem, "The House by the Side of the Road" by Sam Walter Foss."With [love for her church] came a demand for action from her church," said Bynum. "She wanted St. Paul to be a beacon for good purpose in this community and in this world."St. Paul is collecting funds in her name to construct a new building off Rogers Road. The church plans for the new facility to include public programs for children and seniors and affordable housing for local families.
jesse.deconto@newsobserver.com or 932-8760
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