Merrill Pittman Cooper, 101, had a distinguished career as one of the first Black trolley car drivers in Philadelphia, and a powerful leader in the union. But when he was a teen during segregation in the 1930s, his single mother was too poor to pay his school tuition.
In 1938, he had just finished his junior year of high school at Storer College in Harpers Ferry, W.Va., a boarding school founded after the Civil War that initially educated formerly enslaved children.
Cooper said he realized that his mother, who worked as a live-in housekeeper, couldn't afford to make the final tuition payment for his senior year. He encouraged her to move them to Philadelphia, where she had family.
"She worked so hard, and it all became so difficult that I just decided it would be best to give up continuing at the school," he said.
He took a job at a women's apparel store in Philadelphia to help pay the bills, then was hired in 1945 as a city trolley car operator, he said.
"It was tough when I first started," said Cooper, remembering the racism he endured. "I wouldn't want to repeat some of the things people said to me when they saw me operating the trolley. We had to have the National Guard on board to keep the peace."
He was proud of his career, but there was always one thing that bothered him. He wished he had graduated from high school and received his diploma.
"As time went on, I thought it was probably too late, so I put it behind me and made the best of the situation," said Cooper, who grew up in Shepherdstown, W.Va., near Harpers Ferry, and now lives in Union City, N.J.