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Odessa Everette Sutton, 97

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Odessa Everette Sutton was born Feb. 22, 1922, in North Little Rock, Ark., to Henrietta and Herbert Smith and passed away on Nov. 1, 2019, at Summit Hospital in Oakland.

Odessa Everette married Paul Sutton in Little Rock on July 12, 1943. They moved West, finally settling in Oakland. Known for his culinary skills, Mr. Sutton was a cook for a UC Berkeley fraternity, and he and Odessa opened a sandwich shop near the old Oakland train station.

For 35 years, Mrs. Sutton was transportation supervisor for the Army and Air Force Exchange Service at the Pacific Transportation Center in Oakland (former Oakland Army Base). During that time, she received several “Excellent Service” and “Superior Accomplishment” awards and numerous letters of commendation praising her for her dedication and “professional knowledge, skill and competence” as well as her cheerfulness and ability to get along with others.

She retired in 1982.

Her community involvement included work as a tutor at Madison Junior High School in Oakland. For 60 years, she volunteered, supported and subscribed to Today’s Artists Concerts/Four Seasons Arts, traveling with them to Europe and the Yachats Music Festival.

She was a transportation coordinator for their senior transportation program until she was 94 and an active church member of the Church For Today until her death.

Her church family helped realize her wish to remain in her home with ongoing care. She had the use of only one arm due to lymphedema and eventually hired a part-time caregiver, Maritess Tano, who became her beloved friend.

Mrs. Sutton had an amazing mind.  When doctors asked her companions for a med list, they would nod to her and she would list them all, (and the list was long) including exact dosage. On the night she passed at Summit Hospital, she was recalling the history of the hospital, remembering Samuel Merritt University. etc.

A proud citizen who believed in the Constitution of the United States, Mrs. Sutton did not appreciate foolishness in leadership.

An experienced gardener, Sutton’s Christmas poinsettias bloomed nearly all year round and her tomatoes on her back porch remained productive from summer until January.

She warmed many ‘a heart with her bright smile and her familiar salutation, “Hello, Love!”

She was preceded in death by her husband Paul J. Sutton, her sisters Myrtle Banks and Vivian Ida Mae Smith and her brother Herbert Smith, Jr. She leaves to mourn her family, church family, her many friends and neighbors, doctors, and loving caregiver Maritess Tano.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations can be made to Four Seasons Arts, Inc. or Wounded Warrior Project.

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#NNPA BlackPress

IN MEMORIAM: Hughes Van Ellis, Survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre, Dies at 102

Along with his older sister, Viola Fletcher, months-old Hughes Van Ellis fled the white mobs and fires that tore through the Greenwood District in Tulsa leaving behind rubble and ash. Not only did they lose their homes, they also lost a lifetime of opportunities, Van Ellis told CNN earlier this year. “I lost 102 years. I don’t want nobody else to lose that,” he said. “He died waiting on justice,” his grandnephew, Ike Howard, told CNN.

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Hughes Van Ellis was still fighting for justice until his death Monday.File photo courtesy NNPA.
Hughes Van Ellis was still fighting for justice until his death Monday.File photo courtesy NNPA.

By Stacy M. Brown | NNPA Newswire

Hughes Van Ellis, one of the last three survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, died at 102 on Monday, October 9, according to Oklahoma Democratic Rep. Regina Goodwin, who spoke on behalf of his family.

Ellis died Monday night in Denver, Colorado.

Along with his older sister, Viola Fletcher, months-old Ellis fled the white mobs and fires that tore through the Greenwood District in Tulsa leaving behind rubble and ash.

Not only did they lose their homes, they also lost a lifetime of opportunities, Van Ellis told CNN earlier this year. “I lost 102 years. I don’t want nobody else to lose that,” he said.

“He died waiting on justice,” his grandnephew, Ike Howard, told CNN.

Known affectionately as “Uncle Redd,” Ellis was a WWII war veteran and a symbol of resilience in the face of racial adversity.

Goodwin remarked, “He bravely served America, even as he spent a lifetime awaiting atonement related to the Tulsa Race Massacre, which occurred between May 31 and June 1, 1921, when white mobs violently attacked Black residents, destroying over 35 square blocks of the prosperous Greenwood District, known as “Black Wall Street.”

Goodwin, a staunch advocate for reparations for race massacre survivors, emphasized Ellis’ unwavering commitment to the cause.

“Two days ago, Mr. Ellis urged us to keep fighting for justice,” Goodwin noted. “In the midst of his death, there remains an undying sense of right and wrong. Mr. Ellis was assured we would remain steadfast, and we repeated to him, his own words, ‘We Are One,’ and we lastly expressed our love.”

Ellis leaves behind his sister Viola Fletcher and Lessie Randle as the last known living survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre.

Ellis’ death was deeply mourned by the Diaspora African Forum (DAF), which fondly referred to him as Uncle Redd.

In tribute to his remarkable life and the enduring connection between the African diaspora and their heritage, Van Ellis was granted honorary Ghanaian citizenship.

Dr. Erieka Bennett, founder and head of mission for DAF, and Dr. Toni Luck organized the historic visit of Uncle Redd and Mother Fletcher to Ghana in August 2021. “Mr. Van Ellis’s existence illuminated the indomitable nature of the human spirit amidst overwhelming odds,” Dr. Bennett asserted.

“Granting him honorary Ghanaian citizenship was a gesture of profound respect for his enduring legacy.”

 

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Community

Charles ‘Chuck’ Cherry, Black Newspaper Publisher in Florida, Dies at 66

Charles W. “Chuck’’ Cherry II of Daytona Beach, a fierce advocate of the Black Press and a longtime warrior for social justice, died on Saturday, July 15, at age 66. Chuck Cherry retired as publisher of the Daytona Times and the Florida Courier in 2020 after running the Black newspapers’ editorial operations for decades.

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Chuck Cherry published the Daytona Times and Florida Courier until 2020. Courtesy photo.
Chuck Cherry published the Daytona Times and Florida Courier until 2020. Courtesy photo.

Charles W. “Chuck’’ Cherry II of Daytona Beach, a fierce advocate of the Black Press and a longtime warrior for social justice, died on Saturday, July 15, at age 66.

Chuck Cherry retired as publisher of the Daytona Times and the Florida Courier in 2020 after running the Black newspapers’ editorial operations for decades.

The retired attorney also was an author, speaker, radio broadcaster and strategic business planning consultant.

In 2019, he founded 623 Management, Inc., a company that focused on developing and disseminating messaging to Black America with a specific focus on understanding and reaching Florida’s Black population through a comprehensive marketing strategy.

He also was a sought-after speaker on Black history and civil rights in Daytona Beach and beyond.

Charles W. Cherry II was born on Aug. 6, 1956, in Daytona Beach to Julia T. Cherry and Charles W. Cherry, Sr., founder of the Daytona Times and Florida Courier newspapers. The senior Cherry also was a past president of the Florida NAACP and a former Daytona Beach city commissioner.

Admitted into the Florida Bar in December 1983, he was a former Fort Lauderdale city and South Florida state prosecutor, and practiced law for 21 years before returning to journalism and newspaper publishing as his primary occupation upon the death of Charles W. Cherry, Sr.

For more than 10 years, Chuck Cherry also served as general counsel to the Housing Authority of the City of Fort Lauderdale.

Along with being publisher of the newspapers, he served as general manager of the family-owned radio station WPUL-AM and for years was host of the station’s “Free Your Mind’’ radio show.

Jenise Griffin, who replaced Cherry as publisher in 2020, said, “Chuck Cherry was my longtime mentor and friend, and I am devastated by his passing. He was a giant in the journalism industry and his voice will be missed. As his award-winning column was titled, he told it ‘straight, no chaser.’ I admired him as a journalist, a brother with a great legal mind, and an awesome father.’’

She added, “Although he was no longer a working member of the Daytona Times and Florida Courier, the staffers often still reached out to him for advice and insight on their editorial projects.’’

Plans for a public memorial service are in the works. In lieu of flowers, the Cherry family is requesting that donations be made to the Charles W. Cherry Sr. Endowed Scholarship Fund via giving.morehouse.edu.

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Bay Area

Former BART Director Margaret Pryor, 89

Margaret Katherine Riley Pryor, 89, passed away peacefully at home in Moreno Valley, California during the early morning hours of July 8, 2023. She was born on Nov. 10, 1933, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, to parents Katie Jasper Drake and Luther L. Thompson.

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Margaret Pryor
Margaret Pryor

Margaret Katherine Riley Pryor, 89, passed away peacefully at home in Moreno Valley, California during the early morning hours of July 8, 2023. She was born on Nov. 10, 1933, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, to parents Katie Jasper Drake and Luther L. Thompson. After her family relocated to Phoenix, Arizona, she graduated from Phoenix Technical High School and later attended Arizona State University.

She married the late O.D.V. Owens in 1953 and from that union Malcolm D. Owens and Cheryl Y. Owens were born. She married the late Roy A. Pryor in 1964.

Margaret was first elected to the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) Board of Directors in 1980. She served as the BART board president for three terms.

A tireless advocate of access to public transportation in underserved communities, she made sure Bay Area communities’ interests were represented on all vital transportation industry issues, particularly advocating for increased funding for public transportation and passenger rail in the community she served.

Margaret was also influential in the founding of Black Women Organized for Political Action (BWOPA). She was a member of Bay Area Christian Connection in Oakland, California.

She was preceded in her death by husband Roy A. Pryor, her mother Katie Jasper Drake and father Luther L. Thompson, half-brother Luther James Thompson and half-sisters Wanda Dorsey and Patsy Atkins.

Margaret is survived by her children: Malcolm D. Owens and Cheryl Y. Owens; grandchildren Tente S. Owens (Naykeya), Malcolm C. Owens, Jr. (Christie), and L. Alexander ‘Alex’ Williams III; great-grandchildren: Spring M. Owens, Malcolm Brayden Owens, Mckenzie R. Owens, Maverick C. Owens, Logan A. Williams, Justin A. Williams; step-great-grandchildren Jazmin M. Guidry, Taylor M. Miller, and Seoul M. Worrell; half-sisters: Althea Banner, Angela Bailey (James) and Tarvis Parks.

Margaret leaves many other loved ones and friends to mourn her loss.

She will be remembered as a strong and intelligent woman who impacted many lives throughout her lifespan. Her remains will be interred with her husband, Roy A. Pryor, at Rolling Hills Memorial Park in Richmond, California. Services will be private.

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