“There were just so many people and so many speakers and things going on; I tried to take in as much as I could, but it was a lot to take in,” Briscoe said of the August 26th event.
Briscoe said she is unsure of the official attendance numbers of the march anniversary event, but she said the National Mall, once again, was packed with thousands of people and she was pleased to see the vast diversity in the crowd.
“There was a spirit of joy, I would say a spirit of love and oneness,” said Briscoe, noting that she made a point to talk to people of different ethnicities while there. “It was just so upbeat and people were cooperating with each other, watching out for each other.”
Briscoe said being in the same place where her mother stood was extra special because she’d wanted to attend the original march at the age of 13, but her mother said no because she feared violence would break out at what ultimately was a peaceful event.
“She’s with me in spirit and that’s what really matters,” Briscoe said of her thoughts during the anniversary event. “That I know, that she’s with me in spirit and I know that she knows that I still carry on what she was carrying.”
The more than five-hour anniversary program agenda featured dozens of high-profile speakers who talked about a plethora of civil rights issues, such as systemic racism, hate speech, hate crimes, police brutality, gun violence, poverty, the loss of voting rights and a rollback of reproductive rights, among other social justice topics. King’s son and namesake was among the presenters.
“So [after the anniversary program ended] we marched to the Martin Luther King monument, and then the King family came up and spoke again,” remembers Briscoe. “They had spoken earlier when we were at the Lincoln Monument, and they spoke again and the Reverend [Al] Sharpton spoke again.”
Briscoe said memories of her mother were top of mind for her throughout the event. Denny, a Black teacher in Denver, was a civil rights activist in her own right.
“She was the chairperson at one point of the [advocacy organization] Congress of Racial Equality in Denver and [she] helped organize and fundraise for buses to go to the March on Washington in 1963,” said Briscoe. “And she also was an organizer and participant in [successfully] picketing King Soopers, Safeway, Denver Dry Goods, which is now Macy’s, and Zone Cab to end discriminatory hiring [practices in the mid 1900s]. And she also worked with the Black teachers about discrimination in the Denver Public Schools.”
Denny received numerous accolades for her work, including being inducted into the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame in 2022.
Briscoe said her mother had dreamed of becoming a lawyer, but did not feel that was feasible or attainable as a Black woman during her time. Her mother’s aspirations inspired her own decision to pursue a career in law, first as a lawyer and later as a judge appointed in 2011 by then-Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper. She retired in 2019. Prior to that, Briscoe worked as an assistant city attorney for the Denver City Attorney’s Office and as legal counsel in the Colorado Job Training Office.
Briscoe said the march anniversary festivities exceeded her expectations and reignited her passion to get involved in more social justice issues. It also sparked her desire to complete a book she has been writing about her mother and to work harder at sharing her legacy of fighting for justice in Colorado is never forgotten.
“I think she felt that people weren’t aware of all the hard work that she put in and how she dedicated her life to equality and social justice issues,” said Briscoe. “So, I’m still working on [honoring her]. I’m trying to make sure that I fulfill my promise to her that she would not be forgotten and the work that she did would not be forgotten.”