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The real "Norma Rae" passed away age 68

September 14 2009 at 9:54 PM

Jersey Jo  (Login jfb321)

Inspiration for movie Norma Rae dies at 68
Labor organizer succumbed to long battle with brain cancer

RALEIGH, North Carolina - Crystal Lee Sutton, whose fight to unionize Southern textile plants with low pay and poor conditions was dramatized in the film Norma Rae, has died. She was 68.

Sutton died Friday in a hospice after a long battle with brain cancer, her son, Jay Jordan, said Monday.

She fought it as long as she could and she crossed on over to her new life, he said.
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Actress Sally Field portrayed a character based on Sutton in the movie and won a best-actress Academy Award.

Field said in a statement Sutton was a remarkable woman whose brave struggles have left a lasting impact on this country and without doubt, on me personally. Portraying Crystal Lee Sutton in Norma Rae, however loosely based, not only elevated me as an actress, but as a human being.

In 1973, Sutton was a 33-year-old mother of three earning $2.65 an hour folding towels at J.P. Stevens when a manager fired her for pro-union activity.

In a final act of defiance before police hauled her out, Sutton, who had worked at the plant for 16 years, wrote UNION on a piece of cardboard and climbed onto a table on the plant floor. Other employees responded by shutting down their machines.

Union organizers had targeted J.P. Stevens, then the countrys second-largest textile manufacturer, because the industry was deeply entwined in Southern culture and spread across the regions small towns. However, North Carolina continues to have one of the lowest percentages of unionized workers in the country.

Bruce Raynor, president of Workers United and executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union, worked with Sutton to organize the Stevens plants. In 1974, the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union won the right to represent 3,000 employees at seven Roanoke Rapids plants in northeastern North Carolina.

Crystal was an amazing symbol of workers standing up in the South against overwhelming odds and standing up and winning, Raynor said Monday. The fact that Crystal was a woman in the 70s, leading a struggle of thousands of other textile workers against very powerful, virulently anti-union mill companies, inspired a whole generation of people of women workers, workers of color and white workers.

Raynor said Sutton was also a symbol of the national health care struggle. In a June 2008 interview with The Times-News of Burlington, Sutton said she couldnt get possible life-saving medicines for two months because her insurance company wouldnt cover them. She eventually received the drugs.

How in the world can it take so long to find out (whether they would cover the medicine or not) when it could be a matter of life or death, she said. It is almost like, in a way, committing murder.

Suttons son said his mother kept a photo of Field in the movies climactic scene on her living room wall at her home in Burlington, about 20 miles east of Greensboro. But despite what many people think, she got little profit from the movie or an earlier book written about her, he said.

When they find out she lived very, very modestly, even poorly, in Burlington, theyre surprised, he said.

Jordan said his mother spent years as a labor organizer in the 1970s. She later became a certified nursing assistant in 1988 but had not been able to work for several years because of illnesses.

She never would have been rich. She would have given it to anyone she called the working class poor, people that were deprived, Jordan said.

Sutton donated her letters and papers to Alamance Community College in 2007. She said: I didnt want them to go to some fancy university; I wanted them to go to a college that served the ordinary folks.

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Repetition is the indicator that the insane and unenlightened have lost the argument

 
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(Login indisgeyes)

Re: The real "Norma Rae" passed away age 68

September 14 2009, 10:18 PM 

RIP... Thank you for your bravery!!

 
 

cj
(Login cjgrill)

Re: The real "Norma Rae" passed away age 68

September 14 2009, 10:56 PM 

RIP and may her family find comfort in knowing she lived much of her life fighting for American workers.

 
 
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