Verda Mae Freeman Welcome (18 March 1907 – 22 April 1990) was an American teacher, civil rights leader, and Marylandstate senator. Welcome was the second black woman to be elected to a state senate in the U.S. (Cora Mae Brown was the first in 1952). She spent 25 years in the Maryland legislature and worked to pass legislation which enforced stricter employment regulations and discouraged racial discrimination.
In 1958, Welcome was elected to the Maryland House of Delegates to represent the Fourth District of Baltimore City, becoming the first black woman to hold the position, which she held for three years.[2] Elected to the Maryland State Senate in 1962, she was the second black woman in the United States to be elected to hold a state senate seat.[1][4][7] In April 1964, Welcome survived an assassination attempt; two men were convicted.[1][6] In 1967, Welcome worked towards eliminating Maryland's racial segregation laws which had been in place since slavery was legal.[1][2]
Welcome was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1968, 1972, and 1976.[6] She served in political office until 1982, when she retired.[6] Welcome died on 22 April 1990 in Baltimore.[1]
Other accomplishments
Welcome was awarded a Woman of the Year award in 1962, which was presented by the Women's Auxiliary to the National Medical Association. In 1988, she was inducted into the Maryland Women's Hall of Fame.[2]
Bibliography
Maryland General Assembly, Verda Freeman Welcome: A Person of Principle, 1991.
Welcome, Verda F., My Life and Times: Verda F. Welcome As Told to James M. Abraham. Englewood Cliffs, NJ : Henry House Publishers, Inc., 1991.