Carrie Halsell Ward facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Carrie Halsell Ward
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Born | October 26, 1903 Boulder, Colorado, US
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Died | July 1, 1989 Orangeburg, South Carolina, US
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(aged 85)
Alma mater |
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Occupation | University business instructor |
Known for | First Black student to graduate from Oregon State University |
Carrie Halsell Ward (1903–1989) was Oregon State University's first African-American graduate. She graduated in 1926, with a B.A. of Science in Commerce.
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Early life
Carrie Halsell was born on October 26, 1903 in Boulder, Colorado to William and Bessie Halsell, the third of six children. The family moved to Salem, Oregon around 1912 where William worked various jobs including janitor, laborer, and farmer and by 1921 he was a shopkeeper on State Street.
In high school Carrie was on the honor roll and participated in glee club, girls' club, girls' reserve, commercial club, and typewriting contests; she received her high school diploma from Salem High School in Salem, Oregon, in 1921.
Later life
Oregon
After getting her degree from Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University) in 1926, she moved to Portland, where her family had moved, and worked as a housekeeper for the Meier & Frank department store, one of the few employment opportunities for a black woman in the area. In 1927 The Advocate newspaper printed that Carrie Halsell was vacationing in Corvallis for two weeks in July.
Virginia
In September 1927 Halsell took a position at Virginia Normal and Industrial Institute (now Virginia State University), as a stenographer, assistant to the registrar, and later as an instructor in business. While at Virginia Normal she was an establishing member of the Alpha Eta chapter of Delta Sigma Theta sorority, a historic black sorority.
South Carolina
In 1945 Carrie took a position at South Carolina State University, where her husband, Louis Morris Ward, worked as a faculty member in Business Administration. She obtained a Master's in Business Administration from New York University in 1949 by going to school in the summers.
She died in July 1989, at the age of 85 in Orangeburg, South Carolina.
Legacy
In 2002 Oregon State University named a residence hall in her honor. In 2016 Salem High School posthumously gave her an achievement award as the first African American to graduate from Salem High School.