
History of the Gloucester, VA Branch
The Gloucester County Virginia National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) was founded on
March 13, 1939. The founding branch president at the time of the charter signing was local funeral home director G. Nelson
Carter Sr. Carter bailed local civil rights pioneer Irene Morgan out of jail after she was arrested in Middlesex County, giving
rise to the legal end of segregation in interstate transportation. Carter’s wife, Miriam, was the first Black woman to attend
William and Mary Law School. Their granddaughter, local teacher and attorney Dianne Carter de Mayo, is an active member
of the Gloucester NAACP today, and an alumna of William and Mary.
March 13, 1939. The founding branch president at the time of the charter signing was local funeral home director G. Nelson
Carter Sr. Carter bailed local civil rights pioneer Irene Morgan out of jail after she was arrested in Middlesex County, giving
rise to the legal end of segregation in interstate transportation. Carter’s wife, Miriam, was the first Black woman to attend
William and Mary Law School. Their granddaughter, local teacher and attorney Dianne Carter de Mayo, is an active member
of the Gloucester NAACP today, and an alumna of William and Mary.