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In 1920 Marian Alexander Spencer was born in the town of Gallipolis, Ohio. She lived in the home of her grandfather, a freed slave from West Virginia, with her twin sister, Mildred, two brothers, Harry and Vernon, and her parents. The home was built after her grandfather moved to Gallipolis. She became a member of the NAACP at age 13. In 1938 Spencer graduated from Gallia Academy High in Gallipolis. She was co-valedictorian and a member of the National Honor Society. After graduation, she moved to Cincinnati to attend the University of Cincinnati as a scholarship student with her sister and fellow scholarship student, Mildred Malcolm. While at the University of Cincinnati, Spencer campaigned for the college prom to be open to all students. That was the start of her struggle for equality for all Greater Cincinnatians. Spencer earned a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of Cincinnati in 1942. In 1940, she married Donald A. Spencer, a Cincinnati teacher and real estate broker. They had two sons, Donald Jr. and Edward Alexander. They have two grandsons, Matthew and Oliver. In 1952 Spencer chaired the NAACP Legal Action vs. Coney Island. The case started when Spencer’s sons heard a radio ad inviting children to Coney Island to meet a local TV personality. She telephoned to ask if the invitation applied to all children and was assured that it did; however, when Spencer added, “We are Negroes,” the Coney Island representative admitted the invitation did not extend to Negro children. Spencer was banished from the front gate by a guard brandishing a gun on the Fourth of July, 1952. Spencer filed suit and subsequently won the case, which desegregated Coney Island.

Spencer spent her entire life as a community servant and civil rights activist, working especially hard to desegregate public schools. Spencer has been an activist for seven decades. She became a life member of NAACP, and served on the Executive Board, as chairman of both the Legal Redress and Education committee. In 1981 Spencer became the first and female president of the Cincinnati branch of the NAACP. She remains the only female president of the Cincinnati branch of the NAACP. Spencer also served as chairperson of the Community Steering Committee for Indigent Defense, as chairperson of the Ohio Civil Rights Commission, and as the first African American elected president of the Woman’s City Club. She also served as president of the Links, Inc. Spencer also served as a member of the University of Cincinnati’s Board of Trustees. In 1983, she was the first African American female elected to Cincinnati City Council and served as Vice Mayor and as a member of the Charter Party for one term. Spencer’s career included numerous achievements and many awards and honors for her contributions to human service organizations and civic volunteer work. Among her awards are: Cincinnati Enquirer Woman of the Year Award; Brotherhood Award, National Conference of Christians and Jews; YWCA Career Woman of Achievement Award; and Humanitarian Award, Freedom Heritage Foundation of Columbus, Ohio.

Marian Spencer describes herself as a fighter. "All people should be equal," she said. "There should be equality, above everything. Given equal opportunity, we all arrive at the same place.". Spencer successfully integrated Coney Island and the YWCA. She was recently being named a Lifetime Achiever by Applause! magazine and co-chaired the YWCA's $3.8-million fund-raising campaign. "Without difficulties that people met and overcome, we are less strong," Spencer said. "We've had our share."

In 2004 Marian Spencer and her husband Donald Spencer, initiated legislation seeking to restrain Defendants J. Kenneth Blackwell, in his official capacity as the Secretary of State of Ohio, Intervenor Defendant State of Ohio, the Hamilton County Board of Elections and its Chair Timothy Burke and members Michael Barrett, Todd Ward, Daniel Radford and Director John Williams in their official capacities from discriminating against black voters in Hamilton County on the basis of race. The Spencers sought to restrain Defendants from allowing challengers at the polls in Hamilton County.

Marian and Donald Spencer resided in Avondale, a predominantly African-American neighborhood in Cincinnati, Ohio. The Spencers were legally registered African-American voters who voted in ward 13, precinct H. Marian Spencer estimated that one hundred percent of the voters in her precinct were African-American. The Spencers alleged that the Hamilton County Board of Elections and the Hamilton County Republican Party combined to implement a voter challenge system at the polls on Election Day that discriminated against African-American voters. The Spencers were represented by Cincinnati attorney Alphonse Gerhardstein.