MEMORIAL RESOLUTION CELEBRATING THE LIFE OF HELEN MARIE RAMIREZ-ODELL
WHEREAS, Helen Marie Ramirez-Odell, loving wife, mother, sister, grandmother, great-grandmother, aunt, and fierce activist, passed away on March 22, 2022 at 79 years of age; and
WHEREAS, The Chicago City Council has been informed of Helen's passing by the Honorable Samantha Nugent, Alderman ofthe 39th Ward and the Honorable Susan Sadlowski Garza, Alderman ofthe 10thWard; and
WHEREAS, Helen was born in Chicago on July 22, 1942 to Irving J. and Jessamine Hershinow, and grew up in the Lincoln Square neighborhood; she attended Loyola University Chicago and received her B.S.N and R.N. degrees in nursing in 1964; and
WHEREAS, After receiving her degree, she began working as a nurse at Chicago Pubic Schools where she stayed for over 40 years before retiring in 2001; and
WHEREAS, Helen's activism began in the 1960s when she discovered she could not secure credit to make a purchase from Goldblatt's because she was a woman, and she joined Chicago NOW, where she became an activist for the passage ofthe Equal Rights Amendment; and
WHEREAS, In the 1970s, Helen joined the Chicago Teachers Union and became a member of its Women's Rights Committee, which she chaired from 1984 to 2009, and worked to end sexual harassment, supported women's advancement at the Washburne trade School, sought to improve conditions and employment for women in sports, promoted women's labor history, supported women political candidates, and fought for women's health, birth control, and reproductive choice; Helen was also active in the Chicago Coalition of Labor Union Women and Cassandra, a Radical Feminist Nurses Network; and
WHEREAS, In 1995, Helen helped found the Women in Labor History Project, later called the Working Women's History Project, which is a nonprofit organization focused on preserving and promoting the stories of historical and living Chicago women who contribute to achieving justice and equality in areas of labor, women's human, and civil rights; one ofthe first acts ofthe Working Women's History Project was to publish Helen's book, Working Without Uniforms: School Nursing in Chicago 1951-2001, which is a collection of oral histories ofthe Chicago Public School nurses; and
WHEREAS, Helen worked with a coalition of leaders across the City of Chicago on the Mother Jones Heritage project to bring the Mother Jones statue campaign to fruition to honor the contributions of Mother Jones to the Labor Movement and to women; and
WHEREAS, Helen is preceded in death by her parents, Irving and Jessamine; she leaves to cherish her memories, her husband, Paul A. Odell; daughter, Moira (Ramirez) Melendez; step-children, Cyndi (Odell) Christel and Stephen (Merri) Odell; grandchildren, Michael Melendez, Carson (Sarah), Steve, Ryan (Emily), and David; great-grandchildren, Makailyn, Isabelle, and Ryan Junior; brothers, Bob (the late Pat) Hershinow and Paul Hershinow; nephew, Kevin McLinden; cousins, Ellen Nyberg, Larry (Marianne) Nyberg; and a host of other friends and family; and
WHEREAS, Helen will be deeply missed by her family, friends, and all who knew and loved her; now, therefore
BE IT RESOLVED, That we, the Mayor and members of the City Council of the City of Chicago, gathered here this twenty-seven day of April, 2022, do hereby extend our most heartfelt condolences to the family and friends of Helen Marie Ramirez-Odell; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That a suitable copy ofthis resolution be prepared and presented to the family of Helen Marie Ramirez-Odell as a sign of our honor and respect.