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CONTACT: Gail Hairston, (859) 257-3302

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UK Recognizes Contributions of African-American Women

LEXINGTON, Ky. (April 5, 2007) − In March, the University of Kentucky Center for Research on Violence Against Women, the UK African American Studies and Research Program, Kentucky State University, and the Urban League of Lexington-Fayette County hosted a benefit dinner to unveil the new Endowment on the Multicultural Study of Violence Against Women.

At the event, African-American women who have contributed to the rich heritage and success of UK over the years were recognized.

“The contributions that African-American women have made to UK over the years are praiseworthy, varied and significant to our past, present and future. I am delighted to take the opportunity when we are unveiling an innovative women’s research program to also celebrate the beauty of what a group of women have gifted to this institution,” said UK President Lee T. Todd Jr.

The organizations recognized Mary Henderson Adams, Florence G. Anderson of Clark County, Lula Coleman of Daviess County, Julia Melton of Christian County, Mollie Poston of Christian County, Ella B. Taylor of Fayette County, Heidi Milia Anderson, Juanita Fleming, Helen Frye, Lucy Taylor Hammond, Cordelia "Dee Dee" Harbut, Edythe J. Hayes, Mary Levi Smith, Valerie Still, Doris Y. Wilkinson, and Lynda Brown Wright.

Mary Henderson Adams

Mary Henderson Adams holds the distinction of being the first African American to earn a degree from the University of Kentucky. Adams enrolled at UK in the fall of 1949 after receiving her Bachelor of Arts degree from Kentucky State University and earned her master's degree from the College of Education in 1950. She had returned to Lexington, her hometown, when the opportunity to attend UK presented itself following the Supreme Court ruling that segregated education was unconstitutional.

After graduating from UK, Adams started her teaching career in Cynthiana. She eventually moved back to Lexington where she taught third and fourth grade classes at Constitution and Maxwell elementary schools until she retired in 1989.

Florence G. Anderson, Clark County

Lula Coleman, Daviess County

Julia Melton, Christian County

Mollie Poston, Christian County

Ella B. Taylor, Fayette County

With the passage of the Smith-Lever Act in 1914 that created the Cooperative Extension Service, UK employed Home Demonstration Agents to work with women and youth and to improve life for rural families. The first class of Home Demonstration Agents that year was comprised of 15, five of whom were African-American women. They were employed in a new job and in a new role for women with no previous agents or role models to follow. They traveled throughout the country, frequently on horseback and most often alone. They conducted gardening programs, food safety, sanitation lessons and canning demonstrations, usually outside over open fires, in remote and isolated areas. Their goal was always to improve the lives of women in their assigned counties. They paved the way for all who have followed and set the standards for a profession that continues 93 years later.

Heidi Milia Anderson

Heidi Anderson currently serves as associate provost for faculty affairs at UK, making her the highest ranking African-American female presently employed in the administrative ranks of the university. Before becoming associate provost, Anderson served in the College of Pharmacy in 2002 as director of the Office of Education Innovation where she spearheaded an assessment and planning effort. She was the lead faculty member in the reorganization of the college from a division structure to a departmental structure and successfully revamped the College Governance Document. Anderson’s work in assessment and faculty development has gained her a national reputation and she is consistently called upon to serve as a consultant to national organizations and other colleges of pharmacy. Two years ago, she was appointed as one of three representatives to serve on the 10-member board of the Accreditation Council for Pharmaceutical Education (ACPE), the sole accrediting body for pharmacy. Anderson has made, and continues to make, outstanding contributions to pharmacy and to the university.

Juanita Fleming

Juanita Fleming began her career at UK in 1969 when she was appointed an assistant professor in the College of Nursing. She quickly progressed through the academic ranks to professor in the college and served as the assistant dean for graduate education from 1975 until 1981 and associate dean and director of graduate education from 1982 until 1985.

In 1984, she was appointed associate vice chancellor for academic affairs in the Chandler Medical Center, a post she held until 1991 when she assumed a position of special assistant to the president for academic affairs until her retirement from the university. Her retirement was short-lived however; as she went on to serve in the capacity of provost at Kentucky State University until her second retirement this past year.

Fleming has received numerous awards, including the Great Teacher Award from the UK Alumni Association and membership in the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine and the American Academy of Nursing.

Helen Frye

Helen Frye was born in 1919 in Danville, Ky. As a young woman, she and two other students began attending a UKextension class but were forced to drop out because they were African Americans. The incident was reported in the Louisville Federalnewspaper. When the opportunity to attend classes at UK finally became legally available to her, Frye came to Lexington. In 1963, she became the first African American to receive a library science degree from an ALA-accredited library school in Kentucky. In 2006, she was nominated by Danville native Dr. Frank X. Walker for the UK Lyman T. Johnson Award, and she was chosen to receive the award for her many years of service as a librarian and civil rights activist.

Frye’s oral history is included in the "Civil Rights Movement in Kentucky"oral history project at the Kentucky Historical Society, and she has an oral history interview in Centre College Special Collections in Danville, KY., which highlights her accomplished career and her role in organizing the first integrated theatre production on the Centre College campus in 1951 featuring Danville native R. Todd Duncan.

Lucy Taylor Hammond

Lucy Taylor Hammond decided when she was 6 years old that she wanted to become an Extension agent. Hammond graduated from Kentucky State College in 1950 and, since African Americans were not admitted to graduate programs in the state of Kentucky, she went on to Indiana University for advanced study in food and nutrition and later received master’s degrees from Florida A&M University and from the University of Louisville.

In 1967 she returned to Kentucky as a State Extension Specialist and she became the first coordinator for a food nutrition education program that continues today and serves an average of 4,000 families each year. In the 1980s Hammond took leave from UK and accepted a three-year assignment in Kenya, East Africa.In 1986, Hammond was a U.S. delegate to the Women’s Decade Conference in Kenya and was honored by Egerton College for her distinguished service. Hammond was beloved for her concern for the well-being of rural women anywhere in the world.. She died in 2006.

Cordelia "Dee Dee" Harbut

Cordelia "Dee Dee" Harbut currently serves as director of special programs for the Kentucky Small Business Development Center (KSBDC) in the UK Gatton College of Business and Economics. She helped design and manages the Kentucky Minority and Women Construction Training Program, which provides disadvantaged businesses with the tools and skills necessary to compete for government contracts. Under Harbut’s leadership, the Small Business Development Center was recognized by the Women's Business Enterprise National Council as their Non-profit Partner of the Year.

Two years ago, Harbut established a monthly Women's Peer to Peer Mentoring Group for Lexington businesswomen which is the only known mentoring group in the city specifically catering to businesswomen. Her dedication to assisting underserved communities extends to the disabled. She has served on the Workforce Development's Cabinet's Vocational Rehabilitation advisory group, which determines the feasibility of business plans submitted by disabled individuals seeking grants to start a business. Harbut was recognized by this group with an Employee Star Award.

Edythe J. Hayes

A native of Selma, Ala., Edythe J. Hayes received her bachelor's degree from West Virginia State College at age 18 and her master's degree from the University of Kentucky College of Education in 1953 at age 19. She began teaching in the Lexington Carver Elementary School in 1953, becoming principal of the school and ultimately Deputy Superintendent of Fayette County school system, the first African American to hold that post. Hayes worked in the Fayette County school system for more than40 years and in 1990 was named Administrator of the Year by the Fayette County School Administrators Association.

Hayes received the 1988 Lexington Optimist Cup, one of the city's leading awards, which recognizes outstanding service to the community through volunteer service. Not only was Hayes an alumna of UK, she was the first African-American woman to serve on the UK Board of Trustees. She served as secretary of the board until her term ended in 1992.

The Edith J. Hayes Middle School was opened in 2004 as a lasting tribute to her commitment to education and community. Hayes died in 1999.

Mary Levi Smith

Mary Levi Smith is a graduate of Jackson State University and received her doctorate in education from UK in 1980. After graduating, Smith worked at Tuskegee University and taught in public schools in Tennessee, Mississippi and Kentucky. In 1974, she became an assistant professor of education at Kentucky State University, moving up through the ranks until she becamedean of the College of Applied Sciences and professor of education in 1983. In 1991, she became the 11th–and first female –president of Kentucky State University, serving in that post until 1998.

Smith served on numerous national higher education boards and received many awards including being named an outstanding faculty member at Kentucky State and receiving the Professional Achievement Award from the Louisville Defender newspaper. UK honored Smith in 1995 by inducting her into its Hall of Distinguished Alumni.

Valerie Still

Born in 1961, Still grew up in Camden, N.J., the ninth of 10 children.Her extraordinary sports career began at UK when she received a basketball scholarship. This 6' 1" forward is the leading basketball scorer among both male and female student athletes at UK and the leading rebounder with 2,763 points and 1,525 rebounds. Still was second in the nation in both categories. In the summer of 1981, she competed for the U.S. in the World University Games in Romania where she helped lead the team to a silver medal. Her jersey was retired in January 2003.

Still played professional basketball in Italy for 12 years and upon returning to the U.S., became a charter member of the Inaugural American Basketball League for Women and was a member of the All-ABL Team which was comprised of the top 10 players in the ABL League. She later joined the Women National Basketball Association where she played for the Washington Mystics and was named two-time Most Valuable Player for the 1997-1998 ABL Championship Series.She also served as assistant coach for the Washington Mystics. Still was inducted into the Kentucky Athletic Hall of Fame in 1996 and has since established the Valerie Still Foundation.

Her career since athletics has turned toward academics. She is presently pursuing a master’s degree in African American Studies and has plans to seek her doctorate in education.

Doris Y. Wilkinson

Doris Y. Wilkinson was one of the first African Americans to enroll at the University of Kentucky after the Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education declared public school segregation illegal. She received an undergraduate degree in social work from UK and went on to earn master’s and doctorate degrees from Case Western Reserve University in medical sociology and a master's in public health from Johns Hopkins University.

In 1967, Wilkinson became the first African American appointed to a full-time faculty position at UK. Wilkinson’s tenure at UK is marked with creation of numerous programs contributing to the academic excellence and cultural fabric of the institution. In 1992, she founded UK's African American Studies and Research Program and served as its first director. In1994, she establishedthe Black Women's Conference at UK.Wilkinson also established the Carter G. Woodson Lecture Series to enrich the community's intellectual understanding of issues relating to race and culture. In 2002 the Doris Wilkinson Distinguished Lecture was established in her honor and isan integralpart of the Black Women’s Conference. Wilkinson has a long and stellar record of professional and scholarly research achievements as well as awards including the American Sociological Associations’ Dubois-Johnson Frazier award, a Ford Fellowship to Harvard, and UK’s Hall of Distinguished Alumni.

Lynda Brown Wright

Lynda Brown Wright currently serves as associate professor and chair of the Department of Educational and CounselingPsychology at the UK College of Education. She received an undergraduate degree in psychology from Grambling State University and her doctorate in counseling psychology from Texas A & M University in 1991. She currently teaches courses in assessment and multicultural development and has received an NIH Career Development Award.

Brown Wright’s contribution to the university is evidenced not just in her academic excellence but by service. She has served on numerous committees, including the search committee for the vice president for Institutional Diversity, the search committee for the director of African American Studies, and the Committee for Research and Analysis on the Success of African American Students. She is a faculty affiliate to the African American Studies and Research Program and serves as a member of the Diversity Caucus to the UK Center for Research on Violence Against Women.

In 2005 she received a Diversity Award from the President’s Commission on Diversity. In 2006, Brown Wright was named to GramblingState University's Hall of Fame Gallery of Distinction.

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