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A son remembers his mother, a single working mom, who ran for local office

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LEILA FADEL, HOST:

It's Friday - time for StoryCorps. Back in the 1940s in the small coal mining township of Bethel, Pennsylvania, Marie Sayenga was raising two children alone on a secretary salary. She recognized a need for improvement in her local government and decided to run for office. At StoryCorps, her son, Bill Sayenga, sat with his daughter, Ellen Riek, to remember his mother's lasting influence.

BILL SAYENGA: Mama was widowed when I was 4 years old. She had no education beyond high school, raised my sister and me on almost no money and bought a house so that her kids would have a proper place to grow up. She was 5 foot tall and a half-inch. And when she'd get mad at me and playfully go to swing at me, I could hold my arm out, my fingers against her forehead, and her arms would swing under mine. And then, of course, she'd start to laugh, and she wasn't mad at me anymore. And that was who she was. I don't consider myself a weak person, but I'm puny next to Mama, and I have no idea where that strength came from.

ELLEN RIEK: So, for your grandkids, what do you think it's important to know about Granny? And what do you hope they don't lose in this next generation?

SAYENGA: Integrity, and keep finding out more pieces of who you are. I remember, the second time she ran for tax collector, we're in this small suburb of Pittsburgh, and one of the workers was a guy by the name of John. And John came to the door one Sunday morning with all of my mother's opponent's posters from all around town. He'd torn them all down. And he was very proud of himself. He brought them to the door and smiled and showed Mama and said, look, I took them all down. She said, take those back out and put every damn one of them back up. Bill, you go with him. Make sure he does it. She'd've lost that election rather than cheat even a little bit. That's Mama. Of all the people that I have met in my life, I respect her and admire her more highly than anybody else that I have met.

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FADEL: That's Bill Sayenga remembering his mother, Marie Sayenga, at StoryCorps. Marie went on to win that election and five more before retiring from office in 1978 after 24 years of service. Their conversation is archived at the Library of Congress. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

John White