Gladys Byram Shepperd
American educator
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Gladys Josephine Byram Shepperd (June 1, 1902 – August 5, 1985) was an American educator, writer, and clubwoman, and the fifth national president of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority.
June 1, 1902
Gladys Byram Shepperd | |
|---|---|
Gladys Byram (later Shepperd), from the 1927 yearbook of the University of Chicago | |
| Born | Gladys Josephine Byram June 1, 1902 Memphis, Tennessee, U.S. |
| Died | August 5, 1985 (aged 83) St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. |
| Other names | Gladys Biram |
| Occupations | Educator, writer, clubwoman |
| Known for | Fifth national president, Delta Sigma Theta (1931–1933) |
Early life and education
Gladys Byram was born in Memphis, the daughter of George Washington Byram and Rebecca J. Busby Byram.[1] Her mother was a teacher and her father was a barber. In 1923, she read the Emancipation Proclamation at a Memphis event marking the 60th anniversary of its publication.[2] She graduated from the University of Chicago in 1927.[3]
Career
Shepperd taught history in the segregated high schools of Baltimore from 1927 to 1956.[4] She was eastern regional director of Delta Sigma Theta after college.[5] She was the fifth national president of Delta Sigma Theta, serving as the sorority's leader from 1931 to 1933.[6] She succeeded Anna Johnson Julian, and was in turn succeeded as president by Jeanette Triplett Jones.[7]
Shepperd wrote a biography of civil rights leader Mary Church Terrell, published in 1959.[8] In 1960 she was one of the "several women of national reputation" invited to the annual Women's Week at Morgan State College.[9][10] In 1966, she spoke at the dedication of the Mary Church Terrell Memorial Research Library in Washington, D.C.[11] In the 1960s she was appointed by Spiro Agnew to the Gubernatorial Study Commission on Maryland Folklife.[10][12]
Publications
- Mary Church Terrell: Respectable Person (1959)[13]