Английская Википедия:Bertha Whedbee

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Bertha Whedbee first African American woman to become a police officer in Louisville 1922

Bertha Par Simmons Whedbee (1876 - 1960) was an activist, suffragist, and first African American woman to become a police officer in Louisville, Kentucky.

Biography

Whedbee was born as Bertha Par Simmons in West Virginia in 1879.[1][2] She later became a kindergarten teacher, graduating from the first class of the Colored Kindergarten Association in 1901.[3][2][4] She married a physician, Ellis D. Whedbee, in 1898.[2] They moved to Louisville, Kentucky and had four children together.[5] Whedbee became involved in the women's suffrage movement in Louisville.[6]

In 1919 Bertha Whedbee was inspired to become a police officer herself after local police officers arrested her 17-year-old son, Ellis Jr, as a robbery suspect.[2] Later, the officers charged Ellis with disorderly conduct and a $10 fine.[2] Whedbee didn't believe the charges and confronted the police about the charges, where she was then arrested and charged with a $10 fine as well.[2][7] Bertha's fine was later suspended, but the fine for her son was upheld.[8][9] The Whedbees filed a suit against the police station master.[2] On March 3, 1922, she presented a petition that she be appointed a police officer.[10] Whedbee went on to become the first African American woman to work for the Louisville Metro Police Department when she started on March 22, 1922.[11][12][10] Her mandate was to work only among other African Americans in the community.[10] She worked on the police force until 1927 when she resigned in protest when the other African American officers were dismissed by a new city administration.[13]

Bertha Whedbee died in 1960.[14] She was buried in Louisville Cemetery.[1] There were no headstones for either Bertha or Ellis Sr. Whedbee until they were installed in 2018.[15]

References

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