Spencer spent her entire life as a community servant and
civil rights activist, working especially hard to desegregate public schools. Spencer was an activist for seven decades. She became a life member of the
NAACP, and served on the Executive Board, as chairman of both the Legal Redress and Education committees. In 1981 Spencer became the first female president of the Cincinnati branch of the NAACP. She remains the only female president in the history of the Cincinnati branch of the NAACP. Spencer also served as chairperson of the Community Steering Committee for Indigent Defense, as chairperson of the Ohio Civil Rights Commission, and as the first African American elected president of the Woman's City Club. She served as president of
The Links, Incorporated, and was an active member of the Board of Trustees of the Planned Parenthood of Cincinnati in the 1990s and subsequently served on the Planned Parenthood Foundation Board. Spencer also served as a member of the University of Cincinnati's Board of Trustees. and served as a delegate
1984 Democratic National Convention. Spencer was four years later a
delegate to the
1988 Democratic National Convention, having supported
Jesse Jackson's
presidential candidacy. Spencer's career included numerous achievements and many awards and honors for her contributions to human service organizations and civic volunteer work. Among her awards are: Cincinnati Enquirer Woman of the Year Award; Brotherhood Award, National Conference of Christians and Jews; YWCA Career Woman of Achievement Award; and Humanitarian Award, Freedom Heritage Foundation of Columbus, Ohio. In 1998 Spencer was named a "Great Living Cincinnatian" by the Cincinnati USA Regional Chamber. Her husband was awarded this honor in 2005. He was the first person to receive this award to have been married to a previous recipient. In 2006 she received an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from the
University of Cincinnati. In 2010 the Cincinnati Public Schools renamed an elementary school in
Walnut Hills, Cincinnati the Donald A. and Marian Spencer Education Center. In 2016 the
Cincinnati City Council voted to rename the 100 block of Walnut Street between Theodore Berry Way and Second Street at The Banks "Marian Spencer Way." In 2018 the
University of Cincinnati named a new residence hall on its main campus "Marian Spencer Hall." On June 27, 2021 a
statue of Spencer was unveiled in the Women's Garden in the southeast corner of Smale Riverfront Park in Cincinnati. It is the first statue of a named woman in Cincinnati. The statue was created by sculptors
Tom Tsuchiya and Gina Erardi. The statue was commissioned by the Woman's City Club of Greater Cincinnati." Marian Spencer described herself as a fighter. "All people should be equal," she said. "There should be equality, above everything. Given equal opportunity, we all arrive at the same place." Spencer successfully integrated Coney Island and the
YWCA. She was recently named a Lifetime Achiever by Applause! magazine and co-chaired the YWCA's $3.8-million fund-raising campaign in Cincinnati. "Without difficulties that people met and overcome, we are less strong," Spencer said. "We've had our share." ==Other legal challenges==