Biography
Debbie Amis was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1940. Bell died on February 5, 2017, at 77 years old. Debbie is survived by her husband of more than 50 years, David Bell, as well as her two children, Renee Bell & Andrea Bell. Debbie was the oldest of five children born to B.D. Amis and Sophie Sinowitz. Both of her parents were political activists as well as members of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA). This would later be the reason that Bell herself would become affiliated with the (CPUSA) and leader of the party's Philadelphia District. Bell continued to fight for women, workers, equality, justice, socialism, and peace until her passing.Early life, education, and activism
Bell graduated from Overbrook High School and had her sights set on becoming a teacher. She chose to go to school in West Chester, PA. At this time, West Chester was a segregated town with very newly segregated schools. The traditional route for African American women with the same aspirations as Bell would have chosen to go to Cheyney State. Bell's reasoning for going to West Chester was simply because West Chester offered classes that she was interested in taking as opposed to other "traditional" schools like Cheyney. When Debbie was a senior in college, the communist party that she was affiliated with had asked her to attend a student Civil Rights conference down south in Raleigh, North Carolina. This conference was none other than the founding conference for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). After the conference had finished Bell knew that she wanted to help contribute. She stated "I was determined to make a difference." Debbie was offered a job as a secretary for the SNCC. She declined stating that she was "not going to accept a traditionally female position." This eventually landed her the position of Community Organizer. She used her skills to help desegregate restaurants in Atlanta, Georgia by partaking in sit-ins and marches through or past these segregated restaurants. Bell did not disclose her affiliation with the Communist Party to other members of the SNCC. While working for the SNCC, Bell enrolled in a Negro History class at a university in Atlanta. She was inspired to do so after working with the Atlanta Committee on Appeal for Human Rights (ACOAHR). Coming from a school in a predominately white town in PA, Bell was very impressed in how well the SNCC members organized the movement.Communist Party USA (CPUSA)
Debbie Bell joined the CPUSA at the early age of 17 years old and was an active member for more than 50 years. The United States was still getting over the "Later life
After being released from prison, Bell was no longer able to work for the SNCC. Leaving them and Atlanta behind, Bell returned to her home state of Pennsylvania. Here she began a career as a teacher in the public school system. As it turns out, the last school that Bell worked for was Overbrook High, her alma mater, where she capped a career as a teacher union activist, serving as the elected union representative. As stated above, Debbie Amis Bell continued to fight for equality, justice, and freedom for all until her death in 2017. Debbie had no publications of her own; however, more about her experiences can be read in ''Hands on the Freedom Plow: Personal Accounts by Women in SNCC'' written by Faith S. Holsaert et al.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bell, Debbie Amis 1940 births 2017 deaths Members of the Communist Party USA Activists from Philadelphia Activists for African-American civil rights American civil rights activists Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Pennsylvania socialists Trade unionists from Pennsylvania Activists from Atlanta African-American trade unionists American women trade unionists