- Record: Extensions of Remarks
- Section type: Recognition
- Chamber: House
- Date: April 16, 2026
- Congress: 119th Congress
- Why this source matters: Extensions of Remarks are statements submitted for the official record, even if they were not spoken live on the floor.
HON. DANNY K. DAVIS
of illinois
in the house of representatives
Mr. DAVIS of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, I include in the Record a proclamation honoring the life and legacy of Mrs. Wyanetta Johnson.
Whereas, Mrs. Wyanetta Johnson, born April 18, 1939, in Wyatt, Missouri, to Lem and Estel Gilliam Johnson, who grew up in Charleston, Missouri, and who departed this life on New Year's Day, January 1, 2026, at the age of 86, was a pioneering Black leader, a fierce and loving advocate for educational equity, and a woman whose tireless service transformed the lives of generations of children and families in the communities of Oak Park and River Forest, Illinois, in the 7th Congressional District; and
Whereas, Mrs. Johnson came from a family whose roots in racial justice predated the Civil Rights Movement itself—her family was engaged in justice efforts while working as sharecroppers in the Missouri Delta, and she carried that inheritance of courage and conviction with her when she and her husband Forrest moved to Oak Park in the early 1980s to be near their children and grandchildren, a move that set the course for more than four decades of transformative community advocacy; and
Whereas, in the late 1980s, Mrs. Johnson became a founding leader of the African American Parents for Purposeful Leadership in Education— known as APPLE—serving as both president and vice president of the organization over many years, building a grassroots network that achieved a sustained, daily presence in all of Oak Park's public schools, mentoring Black students during the school day and after school, providing homework assistance, career days, Saturday School, parent seminars, and overnight retreats—all born from her unwavering belief that every child deserved to be seen, supported, and given a full and fair opportunity to succeed; and
High School where all students were welcomed, counseled, tutored, and found rest, and where Mrs. Johnson—who did not hold a college degree— nonetheless counseled first-year teachers on classroom management and discipline, earning the deep respect of educators, administrators, and parents alike, because her authority came not from credentials but from decades of walking alongside children and families with unfailing love and practical wisdom; and
Whereas, Mrs. Johnson was a central and decisive force in advocating for the adoption of
District 200, helping to launch the Freshman All Honors Curriculum now in its fourth year of implementation, and working alongside attorneys and community education experts to challenge the gross inequities Black children experienced in Oak Park's special education and discipline policies—efforts that set the stage for a major overhaul of special education and the establishment of the district's first Director of Equity position, a living institutional monument to her decades of advocacy; and
members simply as “Grandma,” Mrs. Johnson embodied a generosity of spirit that extended far beyond meetings and school board chambers—she regularly reached into her own pocket to feed children, buy clothing for students in need, and support families facing hardship; she attended community events, recruited young filmmakers, catered receptions for emerging artists, drove children to school in sub-zero temperatures, and called, visited, and personally congratulated young people when they achieved positions of leadership and service, as she did when Oak Park's Christina Waters was elected village clerk; and
Whereas, Mrs. Johnson's daughter Dorise Monroe reflected that her mother wanted to make sure that people were treated fairly—whether poor Black, poor White, poor Hispanic, or poor Asian—because she had a heart for people, and no matter where you went, somebody knew her; and OPRF Superintendent Greg Johnson confirmed that many of the school's current practices around community engagement, including the Director of Equity position, have their roots in her advocacy, stating that she was `a powerful force for the students in our school' and that it was `absolutely appropriate' to recognize and honor her efforts; and
Whereas, Mrs. Johnson is survived by her seven children—Gwendolyn, David Hawthorne, Vivian Henderson, Dorise Monroe, James Henderson, Carolyn Henderson, Annette Garnish, and Cynthia Johnson—as well as seventeen grandchildren, thirty-five great-grandchildren, and two great-great-grandchildren, a family as vast and abundant as the love she poured into her community for more than four decades; and,
Whereas, scripture reminds us in Proverbs 31:26, `She opens her mouth with wisdom, and the teaching of kindness is on her tongue'—words that describe not an aspiration but a life actually lived, by a woman who walked into every room carrying both truth and grace, who out-talked the most educated people in the service of the least powerful children in the room, and who leaves behind a community permanently changed for the better by the force of her love and the steadfastness of her will;
Now, therefore, be it resolved, that I, Congressman Danny K. Davis, representing the 7th Congressional District of Illinois, do hereby extend heartfelt condolences to the family of Mrs. Wyanetta Johnson, and offer this Extension of Remarks as a tribute to her life, her advocacy, and the profound and lasting impact she made on the children, families, educators, and institutions of Oak Park and River Forest.
in extraordinary service to justice and children, and as a call to all who carry forward her vision—that every child, in every school, deserves to be seen, supported, and given a full and fair opportunity to thrive.