(BALTIMORE, MD – June 29, 2026) — For years, while many talked about expanding opportunity in Baltimore County, Linda Dorsey Walker organized, researched, testified, educated, and pushed elected officials to confront one of the county’s most important questions:
Who gets represented?
On August 5, Linda Dorsey-Walker will be honored with the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Award during the Black Wall Street Summit at the Thurgood Marshall Amenity Center in Baltimore.
The award recognizes individuals whose leadership strengthens Black communities through business, civic engagement, education, public service, and institution building.
Few have devoted more time to increasing Black political representation in Baltimore County than Linda Dorsey Walker.
A Champion for Representation
For more than two years, Dorsey-Walker became the public face of the grassroots effort to expand the Baltimore County Council.
Her argument was straightforward.
Baltimore County’s population has grown dramatically since the council structure was established in the 1950s. Meanwhile, counties of similar size, including Montgomery County and Prince George’s County, have significantly larger county councils.
Dorsey-Walker believed Baltimore County deserved the same opportunity.
She organized residents.
She educated voters.
She attended hearings.
She challenged elected officials.
She helped gather more than 10,000 petition signatures to place the issue before voters and consistently argued that expanding the council would create a government that better reflected the diversity of Baltimore County.
At the time, Julian Jones was the council’s lone Black member despite a county population that had become majority minority.
For Dorsey-Walker, this was never simply about adding seats.
It was about ensuring every community had a meaningful voice.
Fighting for Fair Maps
Her work did not end with the expansion effort.
Dorsey-Walker became deeply involved in the redistricting process that followed, advocating for maps that many civil rights advocates believed would better comply with the Voting Rights Act and provide fair opportunities for Black voters.
She spent countless hours studying proposed district maps, attending public meetings, working alongside community advocates, and pressing county leaders to adopt districts that reflected population realities rather than political convenience.
Even when disagreements emerged over the final map, Dorsey-Walker remained one of the most informed and persistent voices in the conversation.
Those who worked alongside her frequently described her as prepared, relentless, and committed to ensuring that historically underrepresented communities were heard.
Preserving Black History
Linda Dorsey-Walker’s commitment to community extends well beyond politics.
She has devoted years to documenting the history of Maryland’s Black families, particularly descendants of the Dorsey enslaved community.
After researching her own family’s genealogy, she assembled an extraordinary collection of historical artifacts that tells the story of slavery, survival, and resilience in Maryland.
Her traveling exhibits have educated residents about African American history while encouraging families to explore and preserve their own ancestry.
Rather than allowing painful history to disappear, she has worked to ensure future generations understand both the hardships and the perseverance of those who came before them.
Leadership That Inspires
From civic activism to historical preservation, Linda Dorsey-Walker has consistently demonstrated that meaningful change begins with informed citizens willing to do the work.
She has challenged institutions.
She has challenged assumptions.
Most importantly, she has challenged Baltimore County to become more representative of the people who call it home.
Doni Glover’s Perspective
In nearly a quarter-century of covering Northwest Baltimore County politics, I have watched countless elected officials, candidates, activists, and organizations advocate for change.
In my experience, no single individual has done more to push the conversation about expanding the Baltimore County Council than Linda Dorsey-Walker.
No one.
Black, white, Democrat, Republican, or independent.
Linda understood something many others overlooked.
Baltimore County had outgrown its governing structure.
She repeatedly pointed out that counties with comparable populations—such as Montgomery County and Prince George’s County—operate with eleven council districts. Baltimore County, she argued, deserved similar representation.
Long before expansion became politically popular, Linda was making that case.
She was willing to ask difficult questions.
She challenged elected officials to think bigger.
She pushed leaders to do what many believed was politically uncomfortable but morally necessary.
Leadership is often measured by titles.
Vision is measured by who changes the conversation.
Linda Dorsey-Walker changed the conversation.
For her courage, persistence, historical scholarship, and unwavering commitment to improving representation for the people of Baltimore County, we are proud to honor Linda Dorsey-Walker with the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Award.
Congratulations, Linda.
And thank you for reminding all of us that democracy works best when citizens refuse to stop showing up.


