Sherry D. Harris (1957- )

March 29, 2013 
/ Contributed By: Tisa M. Anders

Sherry Harris||

Sherry Harris|Sherry D. Harris|

Courtesy Seattle Municipal Archives (170186)|Fair use image|

In 1991, Sherry D. Harris was the first Black lesbian elected to public office in the United States. This also gave her the distinction of being the first African American woman on the Seattle City Council in Washington State.

Harris was born on February 27, 1957, in Newark, New Jersey, to a single mom, Dorothy Harris. An only child, she grew up in this community’s ghetto. She recalled witnessing the 1967 riots there. Dorothy Harris became her daughter’s role model with her emphasis on contributing to society and active community involvement.

Harris received a Bachelor of Science degree in Human Factors Engineering (Ergonomic Engineering) from the New Jersey Institute of Technology in 1978. She moved to Seattle shortly after that. As an engineer, she worked for Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Company and Boeing. She engaged extensively in neighborhood activism through such organizations as Maple Leaf Community Club, Northwest Women’s Law Center, Association of Lesbian Professionals of Seattle, and Greater Seattle Business Association. She was appointed to five city boards and commissions in the 1980s.

In 1991, Harris ran for political office in Seattle. She became the first candidate endorsed by the then newly-founded Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, a national organization supporting LGTBQ (Lesbian Gay Transgendered Bisexual Queer) persons in politics. By a 70% majority, Harris defeated the 24-year incumbent, Sam Smith, who had been the first African American elected to the Seattle City Council. She served as an at-large City Council member from 1992 to 1995.

Harris chaired the Council’s Housing, Health, Human Services, and Education Committee and served on the Transportation and Utilities Committees. She sponsored or co-sponsored several gay-positive initiatives. She also helped to raise over $1 million to fight anti-gay ordinances in the state. Growing up in Newark, with its poverty and lack of investment, spurred her to promote downtown Seattle projects like the expansion of the Washington State Convention and Trade Center. In 1994, she and fellow Council Member Jane Noland successfully added an amendment to the Women and Minority Business Enterprise Ordinance to ensure a certain percentage of city contracts for women and minorities, along with encouraging the city’s utilization of their businesses. She co-founded and chaired the Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Caucus National League of Cities.

Sherry Harris lost her re-election bid in 1995. She attempted a political comeback two years later but did not win the general election. Since then, Harris has focused on a holistic vision of people, politics, and society. In 2010, Harris published her book Changing the World from the Inside Out: Politics for the New Millennium. She founded her own company in Seattle: Spirit Mind Body Educational Resources. She lectures and conducts workshops locally, nationally, and internationally.

Author Profile

Tisa M. Anders is an independent scholar and Founder/CEO of Writing the World, LLC in Denver, Colorado. She received her Ph.D. in Religion and Social Change with history as her foundational discipline at the University of Denver/Iliff School of Theology Joint Doctoral Program. Anders specializes in agricultural history and 19th-century US reform movements. She has authored numerous book reviews and encyclopedia entries on history and international relations along with chapters for anthologies on Mexico-US Migration with a focus on the Betabeleros (Mexican and Mexican-American beet field workers) and their contributions to the sugar industry in western Nebraska. She contributed significantly to Votaw Colony Museum, Inc.’s Reconnection public history events (2006-11) which uplifted the former black colonies in Kansas, including Groves Center and Junius G. Groves (1859-1925). She is completing her relationship memoir on love and politics along with her book-length manuscript on 19th-century US activist/author Lydia Maria Child.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Anders, T. (2013, March 29). Sherry D. Harris (1957- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/harris-sherry-d-1957/

Source of the Author's Information:

Eric Marcus, Out in All Directions: A Treasury of Gay and Lesbian America (New York: Warner Books, Inc., 1995); Camille McCausland, The Spectator 62:8 (November 14, 1991);  George Howland, Jr., “Power Lesbians in the Emerald City,” Seattle Weekly News (July 11, 2011), http://www.seattleweekly.com/2001-07-11/news/power-lesbians/.

Further Reading