Dayton civil rights activist a ‘beacon of light’
AlyceD. Lucas, a longtime Dayton civil rights activist and YWCA of Dayton LifetimeAchievementawardwinner, died on Friday inHonolulu, Hawaii.
She was 95. TheYWCAhonored Lucas with the award in August 2016.
Lucas came to Dayton in 1944 after moving from Anderson, Indiana, to take a job atWright-Patterson Air ForceBase,wheresheworked tointegrate thearmedforces. After World War II ended, she began working for the city of Dayton Human Relations Council, where she ensured contract compliance and that companies worked with minorities and women.
General Motors later recruited Lucas to work in theFrigidairedivision tohelp move women and minorities into higher roles in the company. At the time, Lucas told a Dayton Daily News reporter in 2016, they had 14,000 employees at Frigidaire, with only one minority and nowomenin supervisor positions.
She said she recruited minorities off the line and promotedthem, buttheyhad to go outside of thecompany tohirewomen. Itwasn’t easy, but Lucas had backing from the chairman of the board of GM at the time.
In the mid 1980s, she retired early from GM. But she didn’t really retire. In 1984, then Gov. Dick Celeste appointed Lucas to the Ohio Civil Rights Commission, where she investigated complaints
of race and gender discrimination.
She also was one of the first Blackwomen onWDAO radio in the mid-1960s, and wasactivelyinvolvedincalming West Dayton communities
after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated.
Lucas wanted to help young people. In 1976, Lucas founded an organization called Twentig Inc, which established an endowment fund with the Dayton Foundation for scholarships for Black students interested in the arts. She created Beautillion, for youngAfricanAmerican men, a scholarship and mentoring program that is nownational and part of Jack and Jill of America Inc.
She also served on the MontgomeryCountyChildren Services Board for 22 years, duringwhich thecounty children’s home, ShawenAcres, was closed.
Lucas also golfedmuch of her life and was important in eliminating the “Whites Only” clause from the ProfessionalGolfersAssociation bylaws, which helped Black professional golfers play in tournaments.
Her husband, Leo Lucas, died in 2008. He was an accountant, the proprietor of L.A. Lucas& Co. and a life member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc.
Lucas spent the last three yearsofherlifelivinginHonolulu with her daughter, Lea AnnLucas, a psychology professor at the University of Hawaii. Lea Ann Lucas said her mother was a “beacon of light.”
Anywhere her mother would go, she would touch people, and it was a memorable interaction, Lea Ann Lucas said. She would tell everyone they had to make it happen, her daughter said.“I’m just so proud to be her daughter,” she said.
Lea Ann Lucas isworking withNuuanuMemorialPark& Mortuary, 2233NuuanuAve., Honolulu, HI 96817. Memorials can be made to the Dayton Foundation for the Leo Lucas and Alyce Lucas fund, number 7732.