Hortense Canady

Hortense (Golden) Canady (August 18, 1927 October 23, 2010) was a civil rights leader, the first African American elected to the Lansing Board of Education.[3][4] She served as national president of Delta Sigma Theta sorority from 1983-1988.

Hortense Canady
Born
Elizabeth Hortense Golden

(1927-08-18) August 18, 1927[1]
Chicago, Illinois
DiedOctober 23, 2010(2010-10-23) (aged 83)[2]
OrganizationDelta Sigma Theta sorority
Spouse(s)Clinton Canady, Jr.[1]

Biography

Canady was born Elizabeth Hortense Golden on August 18, 1927 in Chicago, Illinois.[1] At age 16, she enrolled in Fisk University, where she met her husband. The two were married on her 18th birthday, prior to his deployment during World War II.[1] She continued her education at Fisk and later received a Bachelor of Science degree in Zoology.[1] Later in life, she went back to school and received a master's degree in higher education from Michigan State University.[1]

Her daughter Alexa Canady was the first African-American woman to become a neurosurgeon.[5]

gollark: "Everyone"
gollark: Philosophically, yes. According to common use, no.
gollark: Kind of fooling you into believing you're talking to a human isn't exactly an indicator of human level intelligence.
gollark: That's kind of ad hominem. Stuff can still be true if a deterministic process says it.
gollark: Well, the free will thing here seems to just be that somehow you magically get nondeterminism introduced somewhere.

References

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