Ada Marie DeBlanc Simond | |
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Born | |
Died | October 23, 1989 85) | (aged
Education | |
Occupation(s) | Public health activist, historian, educator, and writer |
Relatives |
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Ada Simond (November 14, 1903 - October 23, 1989) was an American public health activist, historian, educator, and writer considered a community leader for her contributions to public health and African-American historical education. She was named to the Texas Women's Hall of Fame in 1986.
Simond was born in Iberia Parish, Louisiana in 1903. She is descended from French explorer Louis Juchereau de St. Denis. Her family ran a farm, raising rice, soybeans, and sugarcane. [1]
In 1914, her family moved to Austin, Texas. She was only able to attend one semester of high-school but supplemented her learning by borrowing books from L. C. Anderson, who later went on to found the Colored Teachers State Association of Texas. [2] Simond recalls that the Black children in Austin's segregated schools often relied on "old books discarded by white schools". [3]
In 1922, Simond married Aubrey Askey. Their son, Gilbert Askey, became an arranger, composer, and producer for Motown Records. Their niece, Damita Jo DeBlanc, became an actress, comedian, and singer. Ada and Aubrey divorced in 1927. [1]
In 1929, Simond married Charles Yerwood, a physician in Austin. Simond became stepmother to his two daughters: Connie Yerwood Connor, who became the first Black doctor to serve on the Texas Department of Health and Joyce Yerwood, who became the first female African American physician in Fairfield County, Connecticut. [1]
In 1934, Simond earned her Bachelor of Science in Family Lie Education from Tillotson College. In 1936, she earned her Master of Science from Iowa State University. [4]
In 1982, she was awarded a Doctor of Humane Letters from Huston-Tillotson College. [5]
In 1942, Simond became a public health representative for the Texas Tuberculosis Association, traveling across the state to educate impoverished Texans about proper sanitation and other factors needed to combat tuberculosis. She served in this capacity for 25 years, and cites her efforts in training volunteers as one of her major contributions: "I was able to convince people that helping those less fortunate than themselves transcended financial gain. I left little armies of volunteers everywhere I went." [6] Simond later helped to open a library in East Austin, where most African-Americans lived at that time. [3]
In 1967, Simond reached the mandatory retirement age of 65 at the Texas Tuberculosis Association. She found a similar job at the Texas State Department of Health until being forced to retire again in 1973, when she reached their mandatory retirement age of 70. [6] From 1974 to 1977, Simond worked as a bailiff in the Fifty-Third district in Travis County, Texas. [4] [7]
Starting in 1977, Simond published a series of 6 children's book which explored the African-American experience in Austin. The books are narrated by a character named Mae Dee Lewis, whom Simond based on a childhood friend. Simond cites a desire to help children who were learning to cope with newly integrated Texan schools at the time. [8]
In 1979 she co-founded the W. H. Passon Historical Society to help preserve and promote Black history in Austin. In 1980, she co-founded the George Washington Carver Museum which is located in a historical building that was originally the site of Austin's first Black library. [1]
Simond died in Austin on October 23, 1989. [4]
Simond has been called a "pioneer" among African-American women writers [8] and has been described as having a "marvelous penchant" for history in Austin. [9]
She has also received the Black Heritage Award from the Austin Independent School District and the Human Relations Award from the Texas State Teachers Association. [5]
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