"Things Do Get Better:" Dream Award Scholar Cassidy Whitehurst

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Would you predict a child of addicted parents, who grew up
living in hotels and sometimes cars, would grow up wanting to become a criminal
justice lawyer?

“What happened in my childhood made me choose my career,” said
Cassidy Whitehurst, a 2019 Scholarship America Dream Award Scholar from
Chesapeake, Virginia. “My dad is an alcoholic who left when I was about six
years old. My mom got into an abusive relationship, which led her to turn to
heroin to relieve her pain. She became consumed with this lifestyle. We lived
in and out of numerous hotels and sometimes cars. School wasn’t my priority. I
was worried about my home life.”

When Cassidy was in middle school, her mom went to jail. “I
moved in with my aunt and she gave me a stable home,” Cassidy said. “This was a
wakeup call for me. I realized I did not want to live in that situation ever
again. It made me work harder. My grades increased dramatically, especially
when I got to high school. I strived to be the best I could in everything I
did.”

Cassidy got involved in a service club, Alpha Omega Phi. The club’s activities included trash clean up, volunteering at a nursing home, making meals at the Ronald McDonald House, volunteering with the Norfolk Food Bank and helping with the Chesapeake Miss Abilities pageant.

Cassidy (center) with her fellow Alpha Omega Phi officers, after being named president of the service club.

“The Miss Abilities pageant (for women with disabilities)
was one of my favorites,” Cassidy said. 
“We were paired with a contestant and helped them throughout the
day.  It is such a good feeling to
participate in community service.”

Active with Alpha Omega Phi for three years, Cassidy was the
club’s recording secretary and then president, and was recognized with the Most
Outstanding Member, Leadership and Presidential Awards. 

Other high school activities included playing varsity field
hockey, where she was captain; serving as treasurer of the Junior Class Council
and historian of the Senior Class Council; concertmaster for the Honors
Symphony Orchestra and pageant director and sound director for the Miss Indian
River Pageant. She also belonged to the National Honor Society.

“In eleventh grade as part of my advanced placement U.S.
history class, I had the opportunity to work with several Virginia Native
American tribes and help lobby Congress for the passage of the Thomasina E.
Jordon bill.  This bill gave federal
recognition to six Virginia tribes,” Cassidy said.

“Chief Jesse Nighthawk, the intertribal peace chief of
Virginia, told me about the struggles he’s had personally and his tribe has had
as Native Americans,” she said. “This included mistreatment by the government,
alcoholism and family struggles due to oppression. Hearing these sorrowful
stories made my heart break. I realized then what I wanted to do with my life. I
want to become a civil rights attorney and fight for those who don’t have a
voice.”

After graduating from Indian River High School in Chesapeake in 2018, Cassidy went on to George Mason University. There, she is a sophomore majoring in Government and International Politics with a concentration in law, governance, and philosophy. She is also Speaker Pro Tempore in the 40th Student Senate. “I really wanted the position and thought I would regret it if I didn’t go for it,” she said of her decision to run for the position. “I like leadership and leading teams.”

Cassidy outside the office of her Senator, Mark Warner. She met with the Senator to lobby for college affordability and equity.

She works in the office of Student Involvement and saw
Scholarship America’s Dream Award profiled as the scholarship of the week. “My
first year of college was paid for through one-time scholarships and I wasn’t
sure what I would do for the remainder of my schooling. Receiving the Dream
Award ensures I can get through college,” Cassidy said.

Cassidy continues to volunteer as well. She is a George
Mason University Ambassador leading tours for prospective students and last
semester she volunteered with A Wider Circle, a nonprofit helping people in
poverty in Silver Spring, Maryland. Cassidy sorted clothing donations, cleaned
houseware donations and did whatever else the agency needed at its free store.

“I’m an empathetic person. I just want to help marginalized
communities and any group of people not being treated well,” she said. 

Despite their struggles growing up, Cassidy’s mother, now in
recovery, is her role model. “She went through such an extraordinary hard time.
Seeing her persevere shows me I can do anything. My mother’s recovery showed me
you can hit rock bottom and return stronger than ever. I do not regret what
happened, for it made me a better person.”

“When going through hard times, things do get better.”

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