[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 140 (Thursday, October 1, 2009)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E2434-E2435]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING THE LIFE AND LEGACY OF DR. VASCO SMITH
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HON. STEVE COHEN
of tennessee
in the house of representatives
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Mr. COHEN. Madam Speaker, I rise today to honor the life and legacy
of a great Memphian and a great American, Dr. Vasco Smith. Dr. Smith
was one of the true stalwarts of civil rights in the city of Memphis
and in the nation. Dr. Smith lived a life of service and sacrifice.
Vasco Smith served our nation in the Air Force in the Korean War. A
graduate of LeMoyne College in Memphis and Meharry Medical College in
Nashville, Dr. Smith was a dentist by profession. In 1955, he and his
wife, Maxine, returned to their beloved Memphis, completely segregated
at the time, and used their passion and commitment to become leaders in
the Civil Rights movement.
In 1962, Dr. Smith convinced the owner of the segregated Malco
Theatre in downtown Memphis to gradually integrate by selling tickets
to African-Americans in the ``whites only''
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orchestra level of the theatre. In their pursuit to end racial
discrimination, the Smiths endured numerous death threats, many arrests
by the police, and the tragic murders of their friends Dr. Martin
Luther King and Medgar Evers.
In 1973, Dr. Smith became the first African-American elected to an
at-large position on the Shelby County Commission where he served until
1994. Dr. Smith was a compassionate and effective County Commissioner.
He and I served together as Commissioners from 1978 to 1980. During
this time on the Commission, we worked together to build the Regional
Medical Center, our charity hospital and trauma center in Shelby County
that serves people who would otherwise have no access to health care.
He and fellow County Commissioner Jesse Turner, Sr., who also served as
National Treasurer for the NAACP, were known as ``the freedom
fighters.'' They fought for civil rights in Memphis and stood up when
others did not. They were always the voices of conscience,
reasonableness, and morality in our community.
Vasco Smith was a loving husband to Maxine Smith. As Wendi Thomas of
the Commercial Appeal noted, it is difficult to think of either Smith
without the other because they were a team; indeed, together they were
a force for change and progress. Maxine Smith served as the Executive
Secretary of the Memphis branch of the NAACP for more than forty years
and continues to serve on the NAACP National Board of Directors. For
two decades, Maxine Smith served on the Memphis City School Board. She
served on the Tennessee Board of Regents for over a decade. Married 56
years, Maxine and Vasco Smith were true soulmates. Together, they had
one son, Dr. Vasco ``Smitty'' Smith, III, a dentist like his father,
who made his parents very proud.
Dr. Vasco Smith was a special man to me because he showed moral
rectitude of a type that's rarely seen. He knew justice beyond color
and will be remembered in Memphis as a great civil rights leader, a
husband, a father, a professional, and a great Memphian.
He will be buried Friday. I will be there with him. His was a life
well lived.
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