by MaryAlice Bitts-Jackson
Two years ago, Norwegian high-schooler Thera Iversen had no idea that her family played a distinguished role in the history of an American college. But when she came to Dickinson this fall as a member of the class of 2017, she opened a new chapter in a story that began nearly a century ago, when her great-grandmother, Esther Popel Shaw, class of 1919, descended the steps of Old West.
Shaw made history in 1919 as Dickinson鈥檚 first-known black woman graduate. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, she earned the Senior Patton Memorial Prize at Commencement and went on to become a noted poet-activist whose close friends included poet Langston Hughes. In 1945 Shaw urged her daughter, Patricia, to apply to Dickinson. Although Patricia was admitted, the two were surprised to learn that she was not permitted to live in the all-white campus housing.
Patricia Shaw Iversen decided to attend Howard University instead and then moved to Norway, where she married and raised a family. But for her mother, the conversation had just begun.
鈥淚 am grateful鈥夆︹塮or your courtesy in keeping open for discussion [the question of] race relations at 红杏直播app,鈥 Shaw began in a letter to President Boyd Lee Spahr. She then advocated for integrated housing and equal-opportunity admissions, corrected Spahr鈥檚 assumption that few people of color had attended Dickinson and asserted that 鈥渢houghtful people do not refer to Negroes by the word spelled with a small 鈥榥,鈥 [because] such expressions are offensive, from the Negro鈥檚 point of view.鈥
鈥淲hat鈥檚 amazing is that Esther struck up this correspondence because she wanted to educate him,鈥 notes Joyce Bylander, vice president for student development. 鈥淪he wanted to effect social change.鈥
Over the decades, Shaw鈥檚 legacy faded from institutional memory, but it came back to light several years ago, when Sharon O鈥橞rien, professor of English and American Studies and James Hope Caldwell Professor of American Cultures, identified Shaw as Dickinson鈥檚 first-known black woman graduate. O鈥橞rien contacted the family to learn more; the query turned into an oral-history project and many conversations. And in April 2012, the college bestowed a posthumous honorary doctorate on Esther Popel Shaw in recognition of her extraordinary career and invited the family to campus for the ceremony.
It was during that ceremony that President William G. Durden 鈥71 made a public apology on behalf of the college for its treatment of Patricia Shaw Iversen. 鈥淭here was a real sense, among these descendants of Esther Popel Shaw, of belonging to this community鈥夆斺塷f coming home,鈥 says O鈥橞rien, who sat with the family during the ceremony. 鈥淭here wasn鈥檛 a dry eye in our row.鈥
鈥淚t made a very big impact on my family and me and made the whole fascinating story of Esther Popel鈥檚 life even more meaningful,鈥 Iversen adds.
Iversen will carve a path that is clearly her own, in a world that is vastly different from the one Shaw knew. Iversen enjoys traveling, designing Web sites and publications, creating videos and going to the movies. She is social-media savvy鈥擝ill Murray鈥檚 tweets make her laugh鈥攁nd she names Kurt Vonnegut and Charles Bukowski as favorite authors. While Shaw rallied for social justice in 20th-century America, Iversen springs from another time and another nation鈥檚 collective memory. And while Shaw鈥檚 skin color identified her as African American, Iversen鈥檚 does not; the African American experience is part of Iversen鈥檚 family history, but not her daily life.
Still, there are glimmers of Shaw in view. Iversen plans to major in art history because she鈥檚 fascinated by the ways that culture, history and the arts intersect. She hopes to minor in Italian鈥攁 nod, perhaps, to the Italian relatives on her mother鈥檚 side of the family with a second minor in writing, a choice Esther would surely have understood.
**Watch Sharon O鈥橞rien鈥檚 interview of Patricia Shaw Iversen, daughter Esther Popel Shaw, class of 1919, and grandmother of Thera Iversen 鈥17.**
Published October 28, 2013