Victims of the Charleston Shooting
The victims
of a mass shooting in Charleston, South Carolina, were named on Thursday, and
will be remembered with ongoing vigils in the so-called Holy City and across
the US.
Below is
information about each victim.
·
Clementa Pinckney
Clementa Pinckney was a pastor and state senator who
proposed gun-control legislation and pushed South Carolina to pass a law
requiring police to wear body cameras. Photograph: Randall Hill/Reuters
Called
“Clem” by his friends, 41-year-old Pinckney was a well-respected pastor and
South Carolina state senator, the youngest black representative ever elected to
the legislature.
He graduated
from Allen University with a degree in business administration, and was
described by the university as “one [of] its most prominent alums”.
“Senator
Pinckney was a brilliant young pastor and leader who always possessed an
empowering and healing message,” the university said in a press release. In his
junior year of college, Pinckney was also selected as a fellow for Princeton
University’s Woodrow Wilson summer research program. He received a graduate
degree in public administration from the University of South Carolina.
Pinckney
began preaching at 13 years old, according to his biography on the Mother
Emanuel AME website. At 18, he had received his first pastor’s appointment.
In the state
legislature, he had proposed strict gun-control legislation – later failed – to
require background checks for gun purchases in South Carolina.
He also
campaigned for police to be equipped with body cameras, which he said “may not
be the golden ticket, the golden egg, the end-all-fix-all, but [would help] to
paint a picture of what happens during a police stop”.
Mandatory
body cameras became law in the state one week before Pinckney’s death.
·
Tywanza Sanders
A 2014
graduate of Allen University’s business administration program, Sanders, 26,
was the youngest victim of the church shooting.
The school’s
interim president, Lady June Cole, said that Sanders worked as a barber while
attending the university, and that he was a Charleston native. Sanders also
wrote poetry, and was attempting to have a series of poems published before his
death.
“He was a
quiet, well-known student who was committed to his education. He presented a
warm and helpful spirit as he interacted with his colleagues,” Allen University
said in a press release.
·
Sharonda Coleman-Singleton
“Chris’s
mother was just that parent that as a coach you are proud to have as part of
your program,” baseball head coach Stuart Lake said about Coleman-Singleton.
“What she brought to our team is immeasurable.”
Coleman-Singleton
was a speech therapist at Goose Creek high school in Berkeley County, South Carolina,
and was also the head coach of the girls’ track team there, specifically
handling hurdles and sprints. She ran track herself at South Carolina State
University.
Goose
Creek’s athletic director, Chuck Reedy, told the Post and Courier that
Coleman-Singleton was “very professional in everything she did”.
“She was an
excellent role model for all of our students, in the way she carried herself.
She was just first class,” Reedy said, according to the Post and Courier.
She was also
listed as a reverend at Mother Emanuel AME, according to the church’s website.
·
Cynthia Hurd
Hurd, 54,
was the regional manager of the St Andrew’s library, part of the Charleston
County library system, where she worked for 31 years. Hurd was also the sister
of former North Carolina senator Malcolm Graham.
The library
has canceled events and closed the library following the massacre. Hurd,
“dedicated her life to serving and improving the lives of others”, the library
said in a statement on the system’s Facebook.
“Cynthia was
a tireless servant of the community who spent her life helping residents,
making sure they had every opportunity for an education and personal growth,”
the library said on its Facebook page.
All 16 Charleston
County libraries will close on Thursday in memory of the nine victims shot at
the Mother Emanuel AME church, and the St Andrew’s location will be closed on
Friday as well.
She was a
well-known woman in the community, and the Charleston county coroner Rae Wooten
said that, “Obviously, we’re all shattered by that, she’ll be missed deeply.”
“It is
unimaginable that she would walk into church and not return,” Graham said in a
statement. “But that’s who she was – a woman of faith.”
·
DePayne Middleton-Doctor
Middleton-Doctor,
49, worked in Charleston county as director of the federal community
development block grants, work that helps residents install things such as
septic tanks, the Charleston county council chairman said on Thursday.
“In a very
big way she was doing very human kinds of things in her role in government for
others,” said J Elliott Summey, Charleston council chairman.
Middleton-Doctor
retired from her job in the county in 2005.
·
Rev Dr Daniel L Simmons Sr
The
74-year-old was a reverend at the Mother Emanuel AME Church, in addition to
being a retired pastor, ABC News reported.
·
Ethel Lance
Lance, 70,
was a sexton who had worked at the church for more than 30 years, according to
her family.
“Granny was
the heart of the family,” her grandson Jon Quil Lance told the local Post and
Courier newspaper, as he waited outside the trauma center of Medical University
hospital.
“She’s a
Christian, hardworking; I could call my granny for anything. I don’t have
anyone else like that,” he added.
·
Myra Thompson
Thompson,
59, was the wife of Anthony Thompson, a vicar at the Holy Trinity REC Church in
Charleston.
The Anglican
Church of North America asked for prayers on her husband’s behalf, in a Twitter
post.
·
Susie Jackson
At 87,
Jackson was the oldest of the victims of the Wednesday shooting.
A child of
the civil-rights movement, she witnessed South Carolina’s historic role in
American race relations, up to and including the day of her death at a church
that was home to a slave revolt, before being burned down by white
supremacists, visited by Martin Luther King Jr, and now baring witness to
another massacre.
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