| In 1976, Kentucky state legislator Mae Street Kidd successfully sponsored a
resolution ratifying the 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments to the U.S.
Constitution. It was fitting that a black woman should initiate the state’s
formal repudiation of slavery; that it was Mrs. Kidd was all the more
appropriate.
Born in Millersburg, Kentucky, in 1904 to a black mother and a white father,
Kidd grew up to be a striking woman with fair skin and light hair. Sometimes
accused of trying to pass for white in a segregated society, Kidd felt that she
was doing the opposite—choosing to assert her black identity. Passing for
Black is her story, in her own words, of how she lived in this racial limbo
and the obstacles it presented.
As a Kentucky woman of color during a pioneering period of minority and
women's rights, Kidd seized every opportunity to get ahead. She attended a black
boarding academy after high school and went on to become a successful
businesswoman in the insurance and cosmetic industries in a time when few women,
black or white, were able to compete in a male-dominated society. She also
served with the American Red Cross in England during World War II. It was not
until she was in her sixties that she turned to politics, sitting for seventeen
years in the Kentucky General Assembly—one of the few black women ever to do
so—where she crusaded vigorously for housing rights.
Her story—presented as oral history elicited and edited by Wade Hall—provides
an important benchmark in African American and women's studies and endures as a
vital document in Kentucky history.
Wade Hall is professor emeritus of English and the author of numerous books,
including Hell-Bent
for Music: The Life of Pee Wee King and The Rest of
the Dream: The Black Odyssey of Lyman Johnson. He is
editor of The
Kentucky Anthology: Two Hundred Years of Writing in the Bluegrass
State.
|