Zandra Flemister

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Born
Zandra Iona Flemister

(1951-11-21)November 21, 1951
DiedFebruary 21, 2023(2023-02-21) (aged 71)
Zandra Flemister
Flemister in 2001
Born
Zandra Iona Flemister

(1951-11-21)November 21, 1951
DiedFebruary 21, 2023(2023-02-21) (aged 71)
EducationNational Defense University
Northeastern University
Employer(s)United States Foreign Service
United States Secret Service
Known forFirst African American woman to serve as a U.S. Secret Service agent

Zandra Iona Flemister (November 21, 1951 – February 21, 2023) was a Foreign Service Officer and United States Secret Service agent. Flemister received a bachelor's degree from Northeastern University and a master's degree from the National Defense University. She joined the Secret Service in 1974, becoming the first African American woman to serve as an agent.[1] Four years later, she joined the United States Foreign Service, where she would serve for 33 years before retiring in 2011 because of early-onset Alzheimer's.[2] Flemister, along with over 100 other African American secret service agents, brought a class action lawsuit against the Secret Service for racial discrimination.[3]

Zandra Flemister was born on November 21, 1951, at the 97th General Hospital in Frankfurt, Germany, located in the U.S. Zone of Occupation after World War II. Her parents, Joseph Benjamin Flemister, a Sergeant First Class in the U.S. Army, and Pearl Jenkins, a Foreign Service microfilm technician, had met and married in Alaska in 1948. Flemister spent her early childhood in Europe, moving from Germany to France, where she attended a French-speaking public school in Laon, a small city near the French-Belgian border. Her early exposure to different languages and cultures, instilled by her parents, would shape her worldview and career aspirations.[4]

When Flemister was five years old, her parents separated, and she relocated with her mother to East Hartford, Connecticut, where they lived with her maternal grandparents, Samuel and Lela Jenkins. Her grandfather, a World War I veteran, was deeply involved in the Hartford African American community and was the founder of Camp Bennett, a summer camp aimed at serving urban African-American youth. Flemister spent her childhood engaged in various activities, including ballet and piano lessons, as her grandparents emphasized a well-rounded upbringing.[4]

Flemister's education began at C.A. Barbour Elementary School in Hartford, where she had to adjust to the differences between the rigorous French educational system and the more relaxed American school system. As she progressed through Willowbrook Park Junior High School, Z Flemister excelled both socially and academically, which she described as a time when her "flowers were back in full bloom."[4]

However, her high school years in South Glastonbury, a predominantly Euro-American suburb of Hartford, were marked by racial tensions. Flemister and her family were among the few African-American residents in the area, and she experienced both subtle and overt racism. Despite this, she became involved in school politics, joined the marching band, and participated in the international club.[4]

Flemister also became engaged in civil rights activism, joining her mother in the historic 1963 March on Washington when she was 11 years old. By 16, she participated in the Poor People's Campaign and protested outside the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago.[4]

Following her high school graduation, Flemister enrolled at Northeastern University in Boston, where she majored in Political Science and participated in various work-study programs. Her time at Northeastern included various extracurricular activities, study abroad programs in the Soviet Union and Mexico, and work as a dormitory counselor.[4]

Career

After Retirement

References

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