In 2008, Carter was the only member of Baltimore City's state delegation to receive a grade of "Outstanding" from the local NAACP.
In 1956, an African American doctor named Brewer, who had been the head of the local NAACP, was murdered.
The local NAACP was working to integrate the public swimming pools.
Morial came to prominence as a lawyer fighting to dismantle segregation and as president of the local NAACP from 1962 to 1965.
He was involved in the local NAACP and Urban League of Greater Cleveland.
A few months later, she ran off with another teacher, John Paschal, the president of the local NAACP.
The boycott was lifted on 1 October, after officials of the school district and the local NAACP reached a compromise.
The local NAACP sponsored a vigil.
After losing at the ballot box in 2009, COAST and the local NAACP began collecting signatures in 2011 for a similar ballot initiative.
With her leadership and the organized efforts of the local NAACP, they spearheaded a campaign for the first African American since the 1920s to be elected to the city council.