Clara Luper

Clara Luper

Clara Shepard Luper (born Clara Mae Shepard May 3, 1923 – June 8, 2011) was a civic leader, retired schoolteacher, and a pioneering leader in the American Civil Rights Movement. She is best known for her leadership role in the 1958 Oklahoma City Sit-in Movement, as she, her young son and daughter, and numerous young members of the NAACP Youth Council successfully conducted nonviolent sit-in protests of downtown drugstore lunch-counters which overturned their policies of segregation. The Clara Luper Corridor is a streetscape and civic beautification project from the Oklahoma Capitol area east to northeast Oklahoma City and was announced by Governor Brad Henry.

Luper continued desegregating hundreds of establishments in Oklahoma, and was active on the national level during the 1960s movements.

Read more about Clara Luper:  Early Years, NAACP Youth Council and The Start of The 1958 Oklahoma City Movement, Oklahoma City Sit-ins and Related Activism, National Civil Rights Activism, Oklahoma City Sanitation Workers Strike, Later Years, Writings, See Also, Sources