Pauli Murray, a Baltimore native and the first Black woman to become an Episcopal priest in the United States, is one of five women selected to be honored on the reverse side of a U.S. quarter in 2024.
The former women’s and civil rights activist, writer and lawyer will be the 11th coin from the American Woman Quarters program, which celebrates the accomplishments and contributions made to the U.S. by women from diverse backgrounds.
The U.S. Mint issues up to five reverse designs each year. Murray’s coin will depict her face framed within the letters of “HOPE,” which the organization said symbolizes her belief that hope made societal reforms possible. The line “A song in a weary throat” from her poem “Dark Testament” is incorporated into the design.
The reverse coin was sculpted by Joseph Menna, chief engraver of the U.S. Mint, and designed by Emily Damstra, the agency’s artistic infusion program designer. The obverse side will still feature the portrait of former President George Washington by Laura Gardin Fraser.
Since last year, the American Woman Quarters program has honored women who left an impact on the Civil Rights Movement, women’s suffrage, science, the arts, humanities and more.
Along with Murray, the 2024 editions will feature Patsy Takemoto Mink, the first woman of color to serve in Congress; Mary Edwards Walker, a Civil War surgeon; Celia Cruz, a Cuban American singer; and Zitkala-Ša, a writer, composer, and political activist.
Murray’s advocacy for women and Black people led to her selection, said Kristie McNally, deputy director of the U.S. Mint.
“She’s very important to the women’s movement. She stood up for women; she stood up for African Americans … I think her words and the things she’s done, the actions she’s taken has really made a significant impact on women and African Americans and the United States,” McNally said.
Before attending Howard University School of Law, Murray was rejected from Harvard Law School and the University of North Carolina due to her race and gender.
At Howard, she coined the term “Jane Crow” to describe the discrimination and oppression she experienced as a Black woman,. The term was a play on the Jim Crow laws, which enforced racial segregation.
Despite the adversity, in 1965, Murray became the first Black person to receive a doctor of the science of law degree from Yale Law School.
Murray was the first Black woman ordained an Episcopal priest and the co-founder of the National Organization for Women.
Her sexuality and gender identity have been debated by researchers, with scholars now “acknowledging that were Murray living today, she may have identified as a transgender man,” according to the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
After changing her birth name from Anna Pauline to Pauli, Murray briefly wrote about her struggles with gender dysphoria.