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Dorothy Hamm

Dorothy Hamm (1919-2004) was a leading figure in the civil rights movement in the Commonwealth of Virginia, an author, teacher, and elections officer.

Life and activism
Hamm was born in 1919 in Caroline County, Virginia. She attended Miner Teachers College. In 1942, she married Edward Leslie Hamm, Sr. with whom she had three children. A resolution passed by the Virginia House of Delegates in 2002 commended her, highlighting the historic nature of her accomplishments, and noted that she "was also a plaintiff in the cases that eliminated the pupil placement form, desegregated all athletics in the Arlington public schools, desegregated theaters in Arlington, and eliminated the poll tax." Hamm was an officer of elections in Arlington County for more than 27 years. She served as a delegate to Arlington County and state conventions of the Democratic Party in 1964. She was later appointed assistant registrar and a chief election officer in the Woodlawn precinct in Arlington. She worked with the Congress of Racial Equality as they organized in Arlington, and participated in the 1968 Poor People's March on Washington. Hamm led the establishment of a Head Start program in Arlington in the mid-1960s and taught there for several years. She was also a leader in three churches she attended over the years, including Wright's Chapel United Methodist Church, where she served as secretary, trustee and in the drama group. She received the first Arlington County Martin Luther King Jr. Award for Outstanding Volunteer Service in 1982 == Books==
Books
Integration of Arlington County Schools: My Story Center for Local History, Arlington County, Virginia, 2002 == References ==
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