You Probably Knew Crystal Lee Sutton

by: Connie Schultz, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

You Probably Knew Crystal Lee Sutton
Sally Field as Norma Rae. (Photo: Fox Home Video)

    Crystal Lee Sutton died last week at the age of 68.

    You may have known her by a different name.

    Last year, in a recorded interview with the NC Policy Watch, Sutton recalled the moment that changed her life — and later elevated the lives of thousands of textile workers.

    It was May 1973. She was a 33-year-old mother with three children, widowed once and remarried, making $2.65 an hour assembling towel sets at the J.P. Stevens plant in Roanoke Rapids, N.C. She had just started her shift, when a supervisor ordered her to the front office.

    Sutton walked through the door and into a gaggle of plant supervisors. One of the men accused her of talking too long on the pay phone and spending too much time in the bathroom, but she knew that wasn't the real reason she was standing there.

    She also knew she was about to lose her job.

    "You got to let me go back in my plant and get my purse," she said. Sutton rushed to her station, but she had no intention of reaching for her handbag.

    "I got a piece of cardboard that we used to put in our towel gift sets," she said. "I just grabbed (a magic marker), and I just wrote the word 'union' on that piece of cardboard and climbed on the table. I don't even know how I got up there. And I held that word 'union' up — that cardboard — and turned it around. And people — they finally all shut their machines down."

    Police officers dragged her out of the plant that day. Six years later, Sutton was Norma Rae, the brave union organizer played by Sally Field in the movie.

    The actress won an Oscar, a Golden Globe and Best Actress award at the Cannes Film Festival. The activist faded into relative obscurity, but even as a great-grandmother, she never stopped fighting for the people of her roots.

    She was humble about the union organizing that led to higher wages, health care benefits and paid vacations for textile workers throughout the South. One of her close friends in later years, Carrie Price, didn't know anything about her past until two years after they met.

    They were both nursing assistants and community activists and lived across the street from each other in Burlington, N.C. One day, Price pointed to Sutton's framed photo of Sally Field holding up the "union" sign.

    "Oh, you like Sally Field, too?"

    Sutton's third and longtime husband, Lewis, started to laugh.

    "You don't know who Crystal is?" he said. "She's the real Norma Rae."

    Price was stunned. Sutton just nodded and smiled.

    "She never stopped taking notes, giving interviews and talking about the rights of people who can't fight for themselves," Price said.

    In January 2007, Sutton was diagnosed with brain cancer. She had two surgeries and suffered a two-month lapse in treatment while she haggled over health care coverage. Once again, she told the Burlington Times News, she was fighting a battle facing so many of the working poor.

    "How in the world can it take so long to find out (whether they would cover the medicine or not) when it could be a matter of life or death?" she said. "It is almost like, in a way, committing murder."

    She was a warrior to the end, Price said.

    "I've never seen any woman fight cancer as hard as she did. She was in a wheelchair in the last few months, and she wanted me to push her to a protest about a school's teacher cuts."

    Last year, a Burlington Times News reporter asked Sutton how she'd like to be remembered. "It is not necessary I be remembered as anything," she said, "but I would like to be remembered as a woman who deeply cared for the working poor and the poor people of the U.S. and the world. That my family and children and children like mine will have a fair share and equality."

    "Crystal would never say this about herself," Price said, "but you'd think more people would remember her. You'd think more people would care."

    Crystal Lee Sutton died last Friday.

    The need for her voice lives on.

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Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and the author of two books from Random House, "Life Happens" and "... and His Lovely Wife." She is a featured contributor in a recently released book by Bloomsbury, "The Speech: Race and Barack Obama's 'A More Perfect Union.'" To find out more about Connie Schultz and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.


Comments

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Was her death murder? the

Was her death murder? the result of a "death panel"? or simply the "rationing" of care we should expect from a for-profit insurance corporation?


HONOR!

HONOR!


She hit the nail on the

She hit the nail on the head: It IS MURDER when insurance executives delay the the delivery of vital treatments. Lets start prosecuting!! Its also CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT MURDER when you have whole insurance companies in on the fix.


I've been in touch with one

I've been in touch with one of her nieces, Dawn had this to say: "I am amazed at the outpouring of love from all around the world for my aunt. She is being heralded as a American heroine & that makes our entire family very proud of her accomplishments & contributions to society. She truly didn't meet a stranger. She loved all people. If more of us could be just like her, the world would indeed be a better place to live." If you would like to send condolences to the family, please email Dawn jukeboxjunctionradio@yahoo.com You can also send cards to: Family of Crystal Lee Sutton, 747 Phelps & Workman Road, Mebane, NC 27302 Memorials may be made to the: Crystal Lee Sutton Foundation Truliant Federal Credit Union P.O. Box 26000 Winston Salem NC 27114-6000 Rest in Peace Crystal. As Joe Hill is often quote, Don't Mourn, Organize. Seems fitting right now.


In the words of David Shire

In the words of David Shire and Norman Gimbel: "So it goes like it goes / Like the river flows / And time, it rolls right on / And maybe what's good gets a little bit better / And maybe what's bad gets gone"



I wish I could thank her for

I wish I could thank her for her efforts. My condolences for her family.


A true American heroine, and

A true American heroine, and a genuine soul. I hope she's having a grand time in the afterlife, she's earned it.


R.I.P, heroes come from

R.I.P, heroes come from surprising places and times. This was an angel.


The hidden story here is

The hidden story here is Sutton's haggling with her insurance company for 2 months mid-treatment. Then she died. Who was the "death panel" in her case. Give us the name of her insurance company.


I would think responsible

I would think responsible "truthseekers" would look for details on where she obtained insurance, what kind of policy she had, what drug this was and what happened that resulted in denial before you use this woman as your poster child for Obamacare. According to her age, she was medicare for the past three years. Secondly, I doubt she was denied chemo, it was a drug and what was the drug? Was it experimental, or not normally used or considered effective for this type of tumor? Or was it a simple coding error? You people think if Obamacare were in effect and she needed an experimental drug, the government wouldn't deny it too?? Yes they would and she would wait a LOT longer for approval then two months.


I know the emotion during

I know the emotion during the first seconds of standing with a placard or after donning a sandwich sign. An 85 year old part time activist tips his hat to Ms Sutton.