Sylvia Wright Of Southampton Dies March 22 - 27 East

Sylvia Wright Of Southampton Dies March 22

icon 1 Photo
Brass inlay.  COURTESY STONE SOURCE

Brass inlay. COURTESY STONE SOURCE

author on Mar 28, 2016

Sylvia Wright, a former journalist and civil rights advocate, died on March 22 at her home in Southampton. She was 77 and had been diagnosed with brain cancer in February.

Ms. Wright worked as a writer for the weekly news magazine LIFE in the 1960s and 1970s, covering the Civil Rights Movement and the public and private lives of the Kennedy family in the years after the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy, an event she witnessed. Later in life, she worked part-time as a teacher, sang in renowned gospel choirs, was an avid civil rights advocate, a lover of all things Christmas and an adroit stock market investor.

Ms. Wright was born July 29, 1938, in Fergus Falls, Minnesota, the first daughter of Paul and Vivian Hage. She attended the University of North Dakota, where she came to know James R. Wright, also of Fergus Falls, through a fraternity brother. The couple began dating after college and married in 1962, settling in New York City that same year.

Ms. Wright started work for LIFE magazine’s New York City headquarters as a researcher in 1963 and, after becoming a reporter in 1965, began covering the Civil Rights Movement in the South, the still-struggling national school desegregation effort and poverty and politics in the African-American community. During a trip to Mississippi she and a LIFE photographer registered as journalists with a local police department and were shortly thereafter stopped and held at gunpoint by Ku Klux Klan members, who accused them of being undercover activists, saying her name, Sylvia Wright, was code for “civil rights.”

In the spring of 1968, she and LIFE photographer Bill Eppridge were assigned to travel with New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy’s presidential campaign as he criss-crossed the country to Democratic primaries. After months of 24-hour life with the candidate and the campaign, she and Mr. Eppridge were awaiting a press conference with Mr. Kennedy following his California primary victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles when the senator was shot in a nearby hallway. The pair dashed to the scene, where Mr. Eppridge captured the iconic image of the event, a young busboy kneeling over a dying Mr. Kennedy.

In the weeks, months and years following the second Kennedy assassination, Ms. Wright wrote several intimate profiles of Kennedys and accounts of the private moments and personal reflections on the tumult and tragedy that had engulfed the family. She chronicled the funeral train procession of RFK’s body from New York to Washington D.C. and wrote cover story profiles for the magazine on family matriarch Rose Kennedy and Robert Kennedy’s widow, Ethel Kennedy, and on Senator Edward M. Kennedy.

In 1976 she chronicled Walter Mondale’s campaign trail movements for President Jimmy Carter’s official inaugural book, written by Alex Haley.

For many years she volunteered for and served as assistant director and director of the Men’s Shelter at Riverside Church, where she was an active member and sang in the gospel choir.

After spending summers in Hampton Bays and Shinnecock Hills for 20 years, she and her husband moved to Southampton in 1987, though she continued to attend and remain active at Riverside Church until the early 2000s. Ms. Wright earned a master’s degree from Southampton College in education and worked in the 1990s as a substitute teacher at several local schools.

She is survived by her husband of 54 years, Jimmy Wright; a sister, Dianne Bumpus, husband Phil and their daughter Jody, all of Kansas City; and her son, Michael Wright, a reporter for The Press News Group.

Services were held at Southampton United Methodist Church, where she was a member, on March 30.

Memorial donations may be made to the Southampton United Methodist Church, 160 Main Street, Southampton, NY 11968.

You May Also Like:

Lawfare Project and #EndJewHatred Host Southampton Fundraiser To Advance Jewish Civil Rights Advocacy

Battling anti-Jewish discrimination and actively protecting the rights of Jewish communities and individuals is the ... 17 Aug 2025 by Cailin Riley

Pro-Palestinian Group Holds Protest Ahead of Lawfare Project Fundraiser in Southampton

On August 6, the day before a scheduled fundraiser and panel discussion at the Southampton ... by Cailin Riley

Pamela H. Thompson of Bristol, England, and Wainscott, Dies August 11

Pamela H. Thompson of Bristol, England, and Wainscott, died on August 11 in Bristol after ... 15 Aug 2025 by Staff Writer

Southampton Police Reports for the Week of August 14

SOUTHAMPTON VILLAGE — A Boyesen Road resident reported to Village Police on August 4 that a Mercedes SUV was stolen from his driveway during the overnight hours. The car had been left unlocked with the keys inside. Police said that the Mercedes tracking app showed the vehicle was at a Newark, New Jersey, address at 5:45 a.m. that morning then stopped tracking the vehicle. SOUTHAMPTON VILLAGE — A Rogers Avenue resident reported to Village Police on August 6 that an unknown man had entered her property that evening and had apparently taken items from her house. When police went to ... by Staff Writer

Hampton Bays Firefighter Marissa Rosante Named District’s Firefighter of the Year

A love and passion for the natural world is not a prerequisite for becoming a ... by Cailin Riley

Second Annual STAR Aquacenter Summer Splash Brings 60 Swimmers to Long Beach

Just over 60 people participated in the second annual STAR Aquacenter Summer Splash at Long ... 14 Aug 2025 by Drew Budd

Let’s Go to the Movies! | 27Speaks Podcast

This week, the editors are joined by Eric Kohn, artistic director of the newly revived ... by 27Speaks

Hampton Bays Library Budget Approved Amid Huge Voter Turnout

Hampton Bays voters turned out in large numbers and voted to approve the Hampton Bays Public Library budget by a wide margin on Tuesday. Nearly 500 residents cast votes in the election at the library on Tuesday, three times more than voted on last year’s budget, and the vast majority of them threw their support behind the library. The budget was overwhelmingly approved, 411-87. “The Board of Trustees appreciate how the community pulled together to ensure that the budget passed,” library Executive Director Stephanie McEvoy said on Thursday. “Much gratitude goes out to all the community organizations and private citizens ... by Michael Wright

Southampton Town Takes Department of Interior to Court Over Status of Tribal Land in Hampton Bays

Attorneys for Southampton Town have filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the U.S. Department ... by Michael Wright

Crews Win Trips to Antigua and Barbuda for Sailing Week

Youth was served at Saturday’s 15th annual Antigua & Barbuda Hamptons Challenge Regatta in Sag ... 13 Aug 2025 by Stephen J. Kotz