The First Black Woman to Graduate From Arizona State University

For many years, it was believed that Love Hatton Jordan was the first African American woman to graduate from Arizona State University in 1928. Now an earlier Black woman graduate has been discovered.

Searching through family scrapbooks several years ago, Michele Neptune McHenry and her husband, Joseph McHenry came upon a photo of Stella McHenry. The photograph appeared to be a graduation photo but no school was listed. The couple decided to conduct some research to find out more information about ther relative.

Estella Rochelle McHenry was born in 1904. Her father worked as a smelter operator in the copper mines in Clifton. Her younger brother Lawrence was Joseph McHenry’s father.

Joseph McHenry died in 2019 but his wife Michelle continue the research. She searched Stella’s name on the internet and found a reference to her in a book titled The African American Experience in Tempe. An excerpt from the book read:

“Among the students who leased cottages from the Thomas’ was Stella McHenry of Clifton, Arizona. Reportedly the first African American woman to graduate from the Arizona State Teachers College in Tempe.”

Michelle McHenry contacted the university and archivists found Stella’s photograph in the 1925 yearbook. Further research found that Stella was listed in the Arizona Educational Directory of 1925–26 and 1926–27 as teaching seventh grade at the Douglas School for Colored Students. She died in 1928, at the age of 23 of complications from influenza and pneumonia.

Jessica Salow, assistant archivist and curator of Black collections at Arizona State University said that “Black history can be hidden. So many people that I have run across in Arizona who live in the Black community who have Black family members that have been here for generations, they know about the history of either their community, their family or their people. It’s just that no institution was really interested in a lot of this particular history.”

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

Xavier University of Louisiana to Launch the Country’s Fifth Historically Black Medical School

Once official accreditation approval is granted by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission, the new Xaiver University Ochsner College of Medicine will become the fifth medical school in the United States at a historically Black college or university.

New Faculty Positions for Three Black Scholars

The Black scholars taking on new faculty roles are Jessica Kisunzu at Colorado College, Harrison Prosper at Florida State University, and Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo at the State University of New York at Cortland.

South Carolina State University to Launch Four New Degrees in Engineering and Computer Science

Once the South Carolina Commission on Higher Education grants official approval, South Carolina State University plans to offer bachelor's degrees in mechanical, electrical, and computer engineering, as well as a master's degree in cybersecurity

Herman Taylor Jr. Honored for Advancing Diversity and Inclusion in Cardiology

Dr. Taylor, endowed professor at Morehouse School of Medicine, serves the founding director and principal investigator of the Jackson Health Study, the largest community-based study of cardiovascular disease in African Americans.

Featured Jobs