Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Lauren Hesse, 1966-2010: A Legacy

Posted by Jackson Baker on Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 11:45 AM

Lauren Hesse , 1966-2010
  • Lauren Hesse
Last week I devoted some space to chronicling the funeral of former Tennessee lieutenant governor John Wilder, who had died at the age of 89. As moving and well-attended as the last rites for the venerable Wilder had been, that event in Somerville clearly evoked the end of a life cycle.

It was otherwise in Memphis this past weekend as the friends of Lauren Hesse concluded what had been a week-long vigil with the funeral of the young activist — she had made it one day past her 44th birthday — at St. Anne’s Catholic Church.

Appropriately, Hesse had been buried in the casual garb that had been hers as a mainstay of so many local causes and cultural institutions — the Center for Southern Folklore, the Memphis Music and Heritage Festival, and Celtic music events everywhere, including the ClamJamFry festival in Memphis.

Most of these involvements were in tandem with her longtime partner Steve Steffens, otherwise known as the well-read blogger LeftWingCracker. She had relatively recently been brought into the orbit of the group of young and youngish progressives who met weekly at R and P Billiards on Highland under the rubric of Drinking Liberally, an ad hoc festival in its own right.

By the time of her unexpected and premature passing, apparently brought on by heart failure occasioned by an asthmatic attack, Hesse had become as central a figure as any in this group of bloggers and political activists and had wholly captured their affections.

From the onset of her illness to the time of her burial on Saturday, Hesse was attended by her loving family, by stout-hearted friends, and by a host of well wishers from the political world — mostly Democrats but including some independents and Republicans as well. It was rank-and-file and Who’s who all at once, and it was informed by a spirit, not of a completed life cycle as in the case of Wilder, but of an interrupted life and one that was continuing in the work and thoughts and lives of those Lauren Hesse left behind.

Walter Bolton, a deacon at St. John’s Church and an uncle of the deceased, struck exactly the right note when he observed that survivor Steffens, as a Buddhist, was like himself, as a Catholic, in believing that Lauren’s soul was eternal.

And you could see concrete evidence of that in the days after the funeral when Steffens and his fellow bloggers, like the valiant Trace Sharp (Newscoma), who had come down from Dresden for the week of vigil, went back to work. It was still them writing, but there were indelible traces of Lauren Hesse in what they did. You could tell.

Comments (14)

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Thanks for this, Jackson Baker!

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Posted by vvixen on January 13, 2010 at 12:44 PM

I'm speechless, and you know that takes a lot for me. Jackson, this is marvelous beyond words, thank you.

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Posted by LeftWingCracker on January 13, 2010 at 1:09 PM

As one of Lauren's many friends, I say "Thank You" for your kind words about her. She will be greatly missed even as her spirit keeps on inspiring us to action.

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Posted by A Lex on January 13, 2010 at 1:19 PM

This is wonderful. She was truly a wonderful person!

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Posted by EarthWindFire82 on January 13, 2010 at 1:49 PM

This is wonderful, as was she. Thanks.

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Posted by davidkentholt on January 13, 2010 at 1:53 PM

As Lauren's Mom, I am truly overwhelmed by your warm words of praise for my daughter. Thank you, Jackson, for coming to the hospital, visitation and funeral and being there to comfort Steve, Lauren's myriad friends (who were as close to her as family) and me.
Sharon

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Posted by SharonCS on January 13, 2010 at 4:59 PM

As Lauren's Mom, I am truly overwhelmed by your warm words of praise for my daughter. Thank you, Jackson, for coming to the hospital, visitation and funeral and being there to comfort Steve, Lauren's myriad friends (who were as close to her as family) and me.

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Posted by SharonCS on January 13, 2010 at 5:01 PM

JB, as long as we've been friends, and the far longer time that I've been a reader and admirer, I can honestly say that no column of yours has ever meant more to me.

Kudos.

Lauren was truly remarkable, and I'm fortunate to have known her.

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Posted by RickM on January 13, 2010 at 5:05 PM

Thank you Jackson for a wonderful article. Lauren was an exceptional person and your words mean the world to her friends.

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Posted by memphisjody on January 13, 2010 at 6:17 PM

Thanks, Jackson. A great tribute to a wonderful person. Lauren will be missed by so many.

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Posted by joespake on January 13, 2010 at 10:49 PM

Jackson, your tribute to Lauren means so much to all of us who knew and worked with her. Thanks for sharing the difference Lauren Hesse made in our lives with your readers.

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Posted by Judy Peiser on January 13, 2010 at 11:23 PM

This was a beautiful tribute, Jackson. I have met the Steves and of course have been friends with Trace for some time now, but having read all these wonderful words about her I have been so sorry that I never met Lauren. From all you and others have posted she just sounded terrific. My thoughts are with all of you who were her friends and knew her during this time, and thanks so much for sharing this tribute.

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Posted by Lynnster on January 14, 2010 at 1:49 AM

Thanks Jackson.....i too am speachless....that takes alot.

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Posted by jump4joyce on January 14, 2010 at 3:47 PM

Life is just too short for me...I have known Steve for quite a while as friend, activist, and blogger and am sad I never met his lover. My heart goes out to Steve and Lauren's family.

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Posted by hcy on January 15, 2010 at 3:46 PM
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