Senator Thelma Harper, a sharecropper's daughter was from the Pultight area of Williamson County and was one of eleven children born to Reverend William Claybrooks, Sr. and Clora Thomas Claybrooks. She was a longtime member of the Schrader Lane Church of Christ in Nashville, TN. She is survived by her devoted daughter, Linda and son-in-law Bobby, Atlanta, GA. Brother Dennis (Gwendolyn) Claybrooks. Godsister Charlene Stuart and a host of Devoted Nieces, Nephews, Godchildren and numerous "Dear Friends" and Colleagues. Her early education began in a one-room schoolhouse before attending Haynes High School. After receiving the blessing of her parents, she was united in holy matrimony at the age of 16 to Paul Harper for 60 years until his death in 2018. This proved challenging for the teenage couple because during that time married students were not allowed to attend High School. She was forced out of High School but returned years later and graduated from Cameron High School. To this union two children were born, Dylan and Linda to whom she was an extremely proud and devoted mother. Together, she and her husband owned Harper's Restaurant and several businesses on Jefferson Street. After her children got older, she entered college and graduated with a Bachelor of Science Degree in 1978 from the great Tennessee State University. Senator Thelma Harper is the first Black woman elected to the Tennessee State Senate and the longest serving woman State Senator in Tennessee history. She continued to break the glass ceiling by becoming the first Black woman to preside over the Senate and was the first Senator to serve as Chair of the Tennessee Black Caucus. Additional appointments include Chair of the Senate Government Operations Committee and Vice Chair of the State and Local Government Committee. She was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012. In 2000 she was one of the convention speakers for former Vice President Al Gore, the presidential nominee at the Democratic National Convention. Her jovial speech entitled "The Al Gore I Know" was a highlight on the fourth day of the convention. Harper, a flamboyant legislator was known as a fighter and advocate for her community. She is also known for wearing many hats both literally and figuratively. She began her public service in 1980, when she was elected as executive committeewoman for the 2nd district. She was next elected to the city council in 1983, where she served for 8 years. She simultaneously served as the 2nd District councilwoman and as state senator of the 19th District to complete her term in the city council. Senator Harper's eight-year tenure on the Metropolitan Council saw her lead the communities fight to close the Bordeaux Landfill. The numerous protests and blockades of dump trucks led to her arrest along with her fellow community activists. This activism yielded closure of the dump and proposed legislation that enacted fair and equitable standards of landfill locations. Senator Harper felt it was an honor to be a public servant while being a voice "On the Hill" for her constituents. Elected to the State Senate in November of 1990 she served 28 years retiring in 2018. She tirelessly worked on issues that were important to not only District 19, but all Tennesseans. She was a strong unwavering voice for her community, women, children and the elderly by passing legislation to support their issues. She was also able to foster economic development within the 19th District through the passage of numerous amendments to state budgets that benefited the citizens and local colleges within her district. 2 Her main love, however, was working with youth programs. She proudly sponsored summer science camps for inner city children, established model after-school and summer programs for at-risk adolescent youth, mentored girls at the Woodland Hills Youth Development Center, and sponsored numerous youth sport teams like the Senator Harper Wildcats. She also founded and hosted the annual "Kids Are Special Too" Community Easter Egg Hunt for 37 years in which her family will continue to have this annual event. During her extensive career, Senator Thelma Harper served as chair of the Tennessee Commemorative Women's Suffrage Commission, Vice Chair of the Tennessee Healthcare Commission, member of the Tennessee Economic Council on Women, commissioner of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, and co-chair of Commemorating Metro Nashville Government's 50th Anniversary. Harper stayed actively engaged within the community through her memberships with various organizations. She was a proud member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated and involved with numerous organizations as former President of the National Hook-Up of Black Women, the Nashville Women's Political Caucus, The NAACP, Links, Inc, the Urban League of Middle Tennessee, and Achievement Matters to name a few. She truly understood the importance of getting involved and donated her time and energy as a member of the Board of Directors of the Nashville Symphony, the Third National Bank Economic Development Advisory Council, the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Board of Directors, the Nashville Downtown Partnership Board, the Renewal House Advisory Board, Project Return, the YWCA Advisory Committee, the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Children's Home; the Board of Managers of Northwest YMCA, and the SunTrust Bank Economic Development Advisory Council. KEY HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE PEOPLE • Establishment of a fee waiver to provide students from low-income homes with school supplies and lunches • Sponsored mandatory insurance coverage of breast reconstruction symmetry for breast cancer survivors • Sponsored and passed laws addressing domestic violence • Increased legal protections to stop financial exploitation of the elderly by their caretakers • Safe haven law to save abandoned babies and Co-Sponsored Day Care Incentive Act • Sponsored programs which provided summer science camps for inner-city children • Senate sponsor of the bill to establish the Tennessee Economic Council on Women in 1998, the only state agency dedicated to the research and status of women in Tennessee HIGHLIGHTS of ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT & EMPOWERMENT • Successfully fought to close the Bordeaux Landfill and passed "a standard of fairness in the location of landfills" • Sponsored legislation that renamed Metro Center Boulevard to Rosa Parks Blvd. in honor of the civil rights legend • Passage of numerous amendments to state budgets to benefit the citizens of her district through job training programs, workforce development efforts, and getting funding for Tennessee State University and Meharry Medical College • Instrumental in some of Nashville's Historical moments in the development of the Music City Center, the Downtown Nashville Library, bringing the NFL Titans Football team to Nashville, the Nashville Sounds Stadium, the National Museum of African American Music and the Tennessee State Museum. Please visit lewisandwrightfuneraldirectors.com for details of ceremonies.∼Former Sen. Thelma Harper, Tennessee's longest-serving female state senator and the first Black woman to be elected to the chamber, died Thursday.
Harper, a Democrat from Nashville, was 80 years old. Her death was confirmed by members of both the Tennessee Senate and House Democratic caucuses who had been in touch with Harper's daughter, Linda, though the circumstances of her death are unclear.
"She passed peacefully and unexpectedly this morning holding my hand," Linda Harper wrote in a post on her mother's political Facebook page.
Elected in 1991, Harper made history serving for 30 years as a state senator. But she was also a prominent Nashvillian in her roles as a mentor and mother figure in the community, easily recognizable by her large signature hats.
She was the first African American woman elected to the Tennessee state Senate and was the longest serving female state Senator in state history when she retired.
Each year, she hosted a popular Easter egg hunt for children in Nashville, an event Linda Harper said she promised her mother she would continue.
Harper's political career began in 1981 with her election as the Davidson County Executive Committee Woman for the Tennessee Democratic Party.
By 1983, she was elected to a seat on the Metro Council in Nashville.
Harper served eight years on the Metro Council before winning her first state senate election in a landslide victory, defeating three other candidates.
In the Senate, she became the first African-American woman to preside over the body and was appointed by Lt. Gov. John Wilder to chair the Senate government operations committee. Harper in 2011 became the first senator to lead the legislature's Black Caucus.
She retired in 2018, the year her husband, Paul Harper, died, and is succeeded in her District 19 seat by Sen. Brenda Gilmore, a Democrat who previously served in the House.
Heavily involved in state Democratic politics, Harper served several years as the Tennessee Democratic Caucus chair and a state delegate to the Democratic National Convention from 1980 to 2008. In 2000, Harper introduced presidential candidate Al Gore at the Democratic National Convention.
The Senate Democratic Caucus issued a joint statement Thursday after Harper's death.
"Whether she was fighting landfills for her neighbors, serving a community organization or leading a hearing in the legislature, Thelma Harper was a strong voice for her community, for justice and our most vulnerable children," the six-member caucus wrote. "While this is a sad day for Tennessee, our state is a better place for her legacy of leadership. Thelma Harper loved the Tennessee Senate and the Tennessee Senate loved her right back."
Secretary of State Tre Hargett, who was a Republican member of the House of Representatives during a portion of Harper's career in the Senate, called Harper "a groundbreaking state senator, a leading advocate for Nashville and Davidson County and a wonderful lady."
"She was a fine public servant but an even better friend," Hargett said.
Lt. Gov. Randy McNally also called Harper a "role model" for others.
"Today the legendary Thelma Harper traded in her signature hat for a halo," McNally said in a statement. "A transformative public figure, she was a fierce advocate for her constituents and the city of Nashville."
Funeral arrangements are presently pending.
Senator Thelma Harper, a sharecropper's daughter was from the Pultight area of Williamson County and was one of eleven children born to Reverend William Claybrooks, Sr. and Clora Thomas Claybrooks. She was a longtime member of the Schrader Lane Church of Christ in Nashville, TN. She is survived by her devoted daughter, Linda and son-in-law Bobby, Atlanta, GA. Brother Dennis (Gwendolyn) Claybrooks. Godsister Charlene Stuart and a host of Devoted Nieces, Nephews, Godchildren and numerous "Dear Friends" and Colleagues. Her early education began in a one-room schoolhouse before attending Haynes High School. After receiving the blessing of her parents, she was united in holy matrimony at the age of 16 to Paul Harper for 60 years until his death in 2018. This proved challenging for the teenage couple because during that time married students were not allowed to attend High School. She was forced out of High School but returned years later and graduated from Cameron High School. To this union two children were born, Dylan and Linda to whom she was an extremely proud and devoted mother. Together, she and her husband owned Harper's Restaurant and several businesses on Jefferson Street. After her children got older, she entered college and graduated with a Bachelor of Science Degree in 1978 from the great Tennessee State University. Senator Thelma Harper is the first Black woman elected to the Tennessee State Senate and the longest serving woman State Senator in Tennessee history. She continued to break the glass ceiling by becoming the first Black woman to preside over the Senate and was the first Senator to serve as Chair of the Tennessee Black Caucus. Additional appointments include Chair of the Senate Government Operations Committee and Vice Chair of the State and Local Government Committee. She was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992, 2000, 2004, 2008, and 2012. In 2000 she was one of the convention speakers for former Vice President Al Gore, the presidential nominee at the Democratic National Convention. Her jovial speech entitled "The Al Gore I Know" was a highlight on the fourth day of the convention. Harper, a flamboyant legislator was known as a fighter and advocate for her community. She is also known for wearing many hats both literally and figuratively. She began her public service in 1980, when she was elected as executive committeewoman for the 2nd district. She was next elected to the city council in 1983, where she served for 8 years. She simultaneously served as the 2nd District councilwoman and as state senator of the 19th District to complete her term in the city council. Senator Harper's eight-year tenure on the Metropolitan Council saw her lead the communities fight to close the Bordeaux Landfill. The numerous protests and blockades of dump trucks led to her arrest along with her fellow community activists. This activism yielded closure of the dump and proposed legislation that enacted fair and equitable standards of landfill locations. Senator Harper felt it was an honor to be a public servant while being a voice "On the Hill" for her constituents. Elected to the State Senate in November of 1990 she served 28 years retiring in 2018. She tirelessly worked on issues that were important to not only District 19, but all Tennesseans. She was a strong unwavering voice for her community, women, children and the elderly by passing legislation to support their issues. She was also able to foster economic development within the 19th District through the passage of numerous amendments to state budgets that benefited the citizens and local colleges within her district. 2 Her main love, however, was working with youth programs. She proudly sponsored summer science camps for inner city children, established model after-school and summer programs for at-risk adolescent youth, mentored girls at the Woodland Hills Youth Development Center, and sponsored numerous youth sport teams like the Senator Harper Wildcats. She also founded and hosted the annual "Kids Are Special Too" Community Easter Egg Hunt for 37 years in which her family will continue to have this annual event. During her extensive career, Senator Thelma Harper served as chair of the Tennessee Commemorative Women's Suffrage Commission, Vice Chair of the Tennessee Healthcare Commission, member of the Tennessee Economic Council on Women, commissioner of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, and co-chair of Commemorating Metro Nashville Government's 50th Anniversary. Harper stayed actively engaged within the community through her memberships with various organizations. She was a proud member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated and involved with numerous organizations as former President of the National Hook-Up of Black Women, the Nashville Women's Political Caucus, The NAACP, Links, Inc, the Urban League of Middle Tennessee, and Achievement Matters to name a few. She truly understood the importance of getting involved and donated her time and energy as a member of the Board of Directors of the Nashville Symphony, the Third National Bank Economic Development Advisory Council, the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Board of Directors, the Nashville Downtown Partnership Board, the Renewal House Advisory Board, Project Return, the YWCA Advisory Committee, the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Children's Home; the Board of Managers of Northwest YMCA, and the SunTrust Bank Economic Development Advisory Council. KEY HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE PEOPLE • Establishment of a fee waiver to provide students from low-income homes with school supplies and lunches • Sponsored mandatory insurance coverage of breast reconstruction symmetry for breast cancer survivors • Sponsored and passed laws addressing domestic violence • Increased legal protections to stop financial exploitation of the elderly by their caretakers • Safe haven law to save abandoned babies and Co-Sponsored Day Care Incentive Act • Sponsored programs which provided summer science camps for inner-city children • Senate sponsor of the bill to establish the Tennessee Economic Council on Women in 1998, the only state agency dedicated to the research and status of women in Tennessee HIGHLIGHTS of ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT & EMPOWERMENT • Successfully fought to close the Bordeaux Landfill and passed "a standard of fairness in the location of landfills" • Sponsored legislation that renamed Metro Center Boulevard to Rosa Parks Blvd. in honor of the civil rights legend • Passage of numerous amendments to state budgets to benefit the citizens of her district through job training programs, workforce development efforts, and getting funding for Tennessee State University and Meharry Medical College • Instrumental in some of Nashville's Historical moments in the development of the Music City Center, the Downtown Nashville Library, bringing the NFL Titans Football team to Nashville, the Nashville Sounds Stadium, the National Museum of African American Music and the Tennessee State Museum. Please visit lewisandwrightfuneraldirectors.com for details of ceremonies.∼Former Sen. Thelma Harper, Tennessee's longest-serving female state senator and the first Black woman to be elected to the chamber, died Thursday.
Harper, a Democrat from Nashville, was 80 years old. Her death was confirmed by members of both the Tennessee Senate and House Democratic caucuses who had been in touch with Harper's daughter, Linda, though the circumstances of her death are unclear.
"She passed peacefully and unexpectedly this morning holding my hand," Linda Harper wrote in a post on her mother's political Facebook page.
Elected in 1991, Harper made history serving for 30 years as a state senator. But she was also a prominent Nashvillian in her roles as a mentor and mother figure in the community, easily recognizable by her large signature hats.
She was the first African American woman elected to the Tennessee state Senate and was the longest serving female state Senator in state history when she retired.
Each year, she hosted a popular Easter egg hunt for children in Nashville, an event Linda Harper said she promised her mother she would continue.
Harper's political career began in 1981 with her election as the Davidson County Executive Committee Woman for the Tennessee Democratic Party.
By 1983, she was elected to a seat on the Metro Council in Nashville.
Harper served eight years on the Metro Council before winning her first state senate election in a landslide victory, defeating three other candidates.
In the Senate, she became the first African-American woman to preside over the body and was appointed by Lt. Gov. John Wilder to chair the Senate government operations committee. Harper in 2011 became the first senator to lead the legislature's Black Caucus.
She retired in 2018, the year her husband, Paul Harper, died, and is succeeded in her District 19 seat by Sen. Brenda Gilmore, a Democrat who previously served in the House.
Heavily involved in state Democratic politics, Harper served several years as the Tennessee Democratic Caucus chair and a state delegate to the Democratic National Convention from 1980 to 2008. In 2000, Harper introduced presidential candidate Al Gore at the Democratic National Convention.
The Senate Democratic Caucus issued a joint statement Thursday after Harper's death.
"Whether she was fighting landfills for her neighbors, serving a community organization or leading a hearing in the legislature, Thelma Harper was a strong voice for her community, for justice and our most vulnerable children," the six-member caucus wrote. "While this is a sad day for Tennessee, our state is a better place for her legacy of leadership. Thelma Harper loved the Tennessee Senate and the Tennessee Senate loved her right back."
Secretary of State Tre Hargett, who was a Republican member of the House of Representatives during a portion of Harper's career in the Senate, called Harper "a groundbreaking state senator, a leading advocate for Nashville and Davidson County and a wonderful lady."
"She was a fine public servant but an even better friend," Hargett said.
Lt. Gov. Randy McNally also called Harper a "role model" for others.
"Today the legendary Thelma Harper traded in her signature hat for a halo," McNally said in a statement. "A transformative public figure, she was a fierce advocate for her constituents and the city of Nashville."
Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/226465479/thelma_marie-harper: accessed
), memorial page for Senator Thelma Marie Claybrooks Harper (2 Dec 1940–22 Apr 2021), Find a Grave Memorial ID 226465479, citing Greenwood Cemetery, Nashville,
Davidson County,
Tennessee,
USA;
Maintained by Renee' Farley Martin (contributor 47864641).
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