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News
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HAVEN
gets land donation from
A.C.
native who believes in the cause
By
JOAN CORBETT For The Press
Published:
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
ATLANTIC
CITY -
She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., but still has sand in her
shoes, as well as a condo at the shore. Her
strong family ties to Atlantic City and her desire to help
others led Myra Mundy Briggs, 79, to donate a piece of land
in the city that she owned to HAVEN, a non profit organization
that is committed to providing affordable housing for victims
of domestic violence and their children.
"I think
I felt that it would be an opportunity to kind of give something
back to the community, which was a good place to grow up in," Briggs
said. "I had a lot of fun here.
I have lots of good memories here. Even though there were problems
growing up, particularly for blacks, it was a place where you
could really help yourself."
Briggs's
father, Albert, was the superintendent of services at the Traymore
Hotel, where he was in charge of hiring, training, and supervising
elevator men, bellmen, and valets.
Her
mother, Susan, had a teaching certificate from North Carolina,
which was not accepted in New Jersey, so she was employed as
a maid, waitress, or pantry helper in some of the smaller hotels
off the Boardwalk. After her children were born, she became
a full-time homemaker, as was common at the time. Briggs
said that as soon as you got your working papers, you could
always get a job in the summertime."Blacks
couldn't get certain types of jobs, of course," she recalls,
adding that when she was in high school some of her classmates
got jobs at Wool-worth's.
However,
Briggs and her sister, Alberta, found employment for several
summers at the soda fountain of Barsky's Drug Store, located
at Little Rock and Atlantic avenues in Ventnor. Barsky's had
black and white employees. Briggs
has fond memories of the beach and Boardwalk, as well as the
entertainment that would come to the resort in the summer.
She
said her home in the Stanley Holmes Village was near the old
Club Harlem. Briggs,
a widow, was married to her husband, Kenneth, a New York City
Firefighter for 32 years, and has one son, Kenneth Briggs Jr.,
who has two children.
She
has both a bachelor's and a master's degree in Early Childhood
Education. As a kindergarten teacher, she worked for the Board
of Education for almost 33 years in Brooklyn and in Manhattan
and was a teacher trainer and a district coordinator of pre-kindergarten
and kindergarten programs. She remembers being a young teacher
and seeing a child with her hair combed in different styles
to cover cigarette burns and cuts.
"My
conversations with Ruth Chesarek (executive director and founder
of HAVEN) made me interested in what she was trying to do," said
Briggs, adding that she felt that by piggybacking on Chesarek
she could contribute to this worthy cause.
After
consulting with her financial advisor, she decided to donate
her property, which is adjacent to a lot HAVEN already owns.
Chesarek
would like to have two or three additional apartments for domestic
violence survivors and their children, as well as a community
garden for the children.
Chesarek
said she feels overwhelmed and very, very grateful for Briggs
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