- Thelma Dewitty
Thelma Dewitty (1912–1977) was the first
African American to teach in theSeattle Public Schools ,Seattle ,Washington ,U.S.A. . She was also active in theNAACP , serving as Seattle branch president in the late 1950s.Mary T. Henry, [http://www.washington.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&File_Id=1163 Dewitty, Thelma (1912-1977)] , HistoryLink, November 10, 1998. Accessed online 30 September 2008.] Karen Gordon (City Historic Preservation Officer), [http://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/preservation/lpbCooperDesignRpt.pdf Report on Designation] of the Cooper Elementary School as a Seattle landmark, August 27, 2002. Accessed online 30 September 2008.] [http://www.nps.gov/nr//feature/wom/2004/cooper.htm Seattle, Washington: Frank B. Cooper Elementary School] , National Parks Service. Accessed online 30 September 2008.]Career
Dewitty was born in
Beaumont, Texas . She began her career as a schoolteacher inCorpus Christi, Texas in 1933. She received her bachelors degree in fromWiley College inMarshall, Texas , in 1941 and transferred to teach in her native Beaumont in 1942.In the summer of 1947, she was attending graduate school at the
University of Washington and writing a mathematics book for children. Her husband was working in Seattle at the time, and she was hoping to be able to stay on as a teacher. The SeattleUrban League , NAACP, the Civic Unity Committee, and Christian Friends for Racial Equality all encouraged the school system to break the color barrier by hiring her. Nonetheless, some of Seattle's long-established African American families were unhappy to see this groundbreaking role go to an outsider.Her first teaching job in Seattle was at the
Frank B. Cooper School . Principal Lester Roblee told the teachers that anyone uncomfortable with teaching on a faculty with a black teacher could transfer to another school. No one took up the offer. One mother objected to having her child in Dewitty's class and asked that the child be removed; Roblee rejected the request.Dewitty hiring broke ground not only because of her race, but because she was a married woman. During
World War II , the Seattle School Board had relaxed a prior rules against married women teachers. The rule was finally eliminated in 1947, the year Dewitty was hired. Shortly after Dewitty was hired, a second African American woman, Marita Johnson, was hired to teach Household Service at Broadway-Edison Technical School, (the precursor toSeattle Central Community College ).From 1947 until her retirement in 1973, Dewitty taught at a number of Seattle schools. After the Cooper School, she taught at the John Hay (1953–55), Laurelhurst (1955–56), and Sandpoint (1956–58) elementaries and finally at Meany Junior High School (1958–1973). At Laurelhurst, she was responsible for successfully challenging several rigid school traditions, including assigned seats in the teachers' room, and a very strict system for distributing school supplies.
Besides serving as a teacher and working with the NAACP, Dewitty served on the Washington State Board Against Discrimination and on the Board of Theater Supervisors for Seattle and King County.
Dewitty and the Cooper School
Dewitty is most strongly associated with the
Frank B. Cooper School . When the old Cooper school was given city landmark status, the fact that it was where Dewitty first taught in Seattle was one of the major reasons cited to give it that status.Gordon, [http://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/preservation/lpbCooperDesignRpt.pdf Report on Designation] , August 27, 2002, especially p. 6. Accessed online 30 September 2008.] Similarly, the discussion of the school on theNational Parks Service page about the school as a site on theNational Register of Historic Places is largely about Dewitty.The old school building is now the
Youngstown Cultural Arts Center and houses the Thelma Dewitty Theater.Notes
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