Good morning POU! Happy Monday! Congrats to our President—elect Joe Biden and Vice President- elect Kamala Harris. This week’s thread will highlight the trailblazing black women who made a difference representing their constituents.
Doris Bunte (b. 1933) is a former Massachusetts state representative and a former administrator of the Boston Housing Authority. She was the first African-American woman to hold either position.
She was born on July 2, 1933, in New York City and educated in the New York City public schools.
She was a tenant activist at the Orchard Park housing project (now Orchard Gardens) in Roxbury.[2] She was a member of the National Rent Board, the Critical Minority Affairs Committee, the National Association of Housing and Redevelopment Officials, the National Tenants Organization, and the Citizens Housing and Planning Association.
In 1972, Bunte was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives (7th Suffolk District, Wards 8, 9 and 12), where she served for 12 years.[2] She was the first African-American woman elected to the Massachusetts state legislature.[3] In 1984, Mayor Raymond Flynn appointed her Administrator of the Boston Housing Authority, where she served until 1992.[2] She was the first African-American woman to hold that position in Boston, and the first former public housing tenant to lead a public housing agency in a major city. During, her career in Massachusetts politics, she was known as a powerful advocate for public housing.
Afterwards she worked at the Boston University School of Public Health and the Center for Sport in Society at Northeastern University before retiring in 2010.