Gloria Carter Spann

Activist

Birthday October 22, 1926

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Plains, Georgia, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1990, Americus, Georgia, U.S. (64 years old)

Nationality Georgia

#43865 Most Popular

1894

Gloria Carter was the second of four children, and the first daughter born to James Earl Carter, Sr. (1894–1953) and Lillian Gordy Carter (1898–1983) and was 24 months younger than her brother, Jimmy.

When Jimmy was small, he pronounced her name "Go Go", a nickname which stuck.

By many accounts, including her mother's, Gloria was the smartest, most interesting, most attractive, most outgoing, and most talented of the Carter children.

As children competing for the affections of their parents, the relationship between Spann and the future president was somewhat strained, but the two grew extremely close in their later years.

Jimmy shot her with a BB gun after she threw a wrench at him when they were children.

1926

Gloria Carter Spann (Carter; October 22, 1926 – March 5, 1990) was a motorcyclist and activist.

1939

Spann was a sister of the 39th president of the United States, Jimmy Carter.

1944

Carter graduated from high school in June 1944 and enrolled in Georgia Southwestern College, where she began to study journalism.

Her plans were deferred when she married a war hero, William Everett Hardy, from Americus.

The Carters disapproved of the match, as the groom was a former drugstore clerk, not a suitable job for well-to-do families at the time.

1946

The marriage produced a son, William Everett (Hardy) Spann (1946–1997).

1949

Gloria returned to Georgia in 1949 from Texas, and her father was upset by the brutal beatings Gloria suffered at her husband's hands.

With her father's help, Gloria had her marriage annulled in 1949.

1950

On December 15, 1950, she married Walter Guy Spann (1925–2012), a farmer from Webster County, Georgia, and he adopted the son of her first marriage.

Walter and Gloria Spann had no children of their own together.

By all accounts, the two had a very happy, affectionate marriage, which lasted almost 40 years, until her death.

1964

In 1964, Spann resigned from the Baptist Church the Carters belonged to after the church voted not to lift its ban on black people from attending.

Although Spann had some level of fame of her own before Carter's election, she was not forced into the spotlight until then.

She was probably the sibling who shunned the spotlight most during her brother's years in office.

1967

She began cycling around 1967.

1969

William Carter Spann moved to California in 1969, and Gloria cited his troubled life as the main factor that turned her back toward her faith.

William Spann often said that his mother rejected him and used this to justify his unconventional behavior.

Gloria Carter Spann never saw her son during the last 21 years of her life.

Though William had moved out to California and severed contact with his family, this did not keep him out of the spotlight.

1976

Before Carter was elected president in 1976, Spann had participated in several campaigns for him.

In his bids for the governorship of Georgia, she made countless phone calls and mailed numerous pamphlets on his behalf.

Spann maintained a relatively low profile as she and her husband participated in cross-country cycling on their Harley-Davidson motorcycles.

During Jimmy Carter's 1976 presidential campaign, William was interviewed in his California jail cell.

Of his uncle's success, he said: "He's in the White House, I'm in the big house."

Gloria also received a phone call threatening to reveal that "Jimmy Carter's got a nephew in jail" if she did not pay a sum of money to keep the caller quiet.

1977

In 1977, she published a book of her mother's letters detailing her mother's struggles and accomplishments during two years working for the Peace Corps in India.

She and Walter were also members of Union Life, a religious brotherhood.

Spann's son caused her great distress.

He became a nocturnal wanderer and often disappeared for three or four days at a time, leaving Spann frantic.

As her husband made good money, Spann was not required to work, but since her son was continually expelled from schools, she began work as a secretary in order to send him to a private school.

She discussed her trouble with her evangelist sister, Ruth Stapleton.

At Stapleton's cabin in the mountains, Spann picked up material that encouraged readers to give their problems to God.

1978

She was noted as one of the first women inducted into Harley-Davidson’s 100,000 Mile Club, was named Most Outstanding Female Motorcyclist in 1978 and worked as an activist for motorcycle rights.

Spann was one of the first women inducted into Harley Davidson’s 100,000 Mile Club, was named Most Outstanding Female Motorcyclist in 1978, and worked as an activist for motorcycle rights.

1979

In 1979, Spann was herself arrested for disorderly conduct when she refused to stop playing a harmonica in a McWaffle restaurant in Americus, Georgia.