Background
She grew up in the upper-middle-class suburban community of Chevy Chase, Maryland.
She grew up in the upper-middle-class suburban community of Chevy Chase, Maryland.
Hughes studied at Cornell University and, upon her graduation, moved to New York City to work as a stockbroker.
In the late 1950s she became involved in the New York chapter of Congress of Racial Equality, and she organized a boycott of dime stores that worked with chain restaurants that resisted the sit-in movements in the South. Hughes started to become ostracized from her colleagues on Wall Street, and she decided to work full time to end racism. In fall of 1960 she took the position as Congress of Racial Equality"s field secretary and, in doing so, she was the first woman to serve on Congress of Racial Equality"s Field Staff.
John Lewis spoke of her, "as graceful and gentle as her name" but, "not at all afraid to speak up when she had strong feelings about something." When explaining her decision to join the Freedom Rides she said, "I figured Southern women should be represented so the South and the nation would realize all Southern people do not think alike." During the journey from Washington, District of Columbia, to New Orleans, she and the other Freedom Riders encountered many acts of violence towards them, particularly in Anniston, Alabama, where their Greyhound bus was engulfed in flames by angry mobs.
She recounts her experience in the Anniston hospital:
"There was no doctor at the hospital, only a nurse They had me breathe pure oxygen but that only burned my throat and did not relieve the coughing.
I was burning hot and my clothes were a wet mess. After awhile Editor and Bert were brought in, choking.
We all lay on our beds and coughed.
Finally, a woman doctor came in—she had to look up smoke poisoning before treating us. They brought in the Negro man who had been in the back of the bus with medical I pointed to him and told them to take care of him.
But they did not bring him into our emergency room.
I understand that they did not do anything at all for Hank. Thirteen in all were brought in, and three were admitted: Editor, the Negro man and myself.
They gave me a room and I slept. When I woke up the nurse asked me if I could talk with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The Federal Bureau of Investigation did not care about us, but only the bombing."
The marriage ended in divorce.
She continued to be active in movements for social justice, environmental protection, and world peace.