The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta ex-school board member ‘broke barriers’

Carolyn Crowder helped ensure kids of all races were treated equally.

- By Christophe­r Quinn cquinn@ajc.com

Carolyn Crowder was a woman who knew how to make her voice heard.

The lifelong metro Atlanta resident helped shepherd Atlanta through the difficult period of school busing, and she served as a prominent PTA official and four-term member of the Atlanta Board of Education. She was also a well-regarded singer, pianist and children’s choir director for 60 years at Andrews Chapel United Methodist Church in Jonesboro. And she remained until recently a vocal community activist.

“She was humble. She broke barriers. And she never bragged about it,” said longtime friend and Atlanta City Council District 1 representa­tive Carla Smith, whose district includes Crowder’s old Thomasvill­e neighborho­od. Smith

said Crowder changed things and helped to correct inequities in Atlanta’s educationa­l system with a thoughtful, articulate, outspoken and firm style — that was also notable for its inclusiven­ess.

“She did everything she did for all the children,” said daughter Sabrina Kennedy. “It didn’t matter what their socioecono­mic or ethnic stratus was. Mom wanted to see everyone excel and be the best person that they could be.”

Carolyn Virginia Brown Crowder, 81, died Nov. 1 of what family members described as natural causes. A memorial service was held Thursday.

Born in Atlanta on April 16, 1938, Crowder got her early education in Jonesboro. She went to Morris Brown College and began a career at the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Atlanta office, where she rose to supervise the administra­tive assistant pool.

In 1958, she married Paul Crowder, now deceased, and quickly started a family. Carolyn Crowder’s early family-conferred lessons on the value of education led her to activism.

She adamantly opposed aspects of then-segregated education, such as black students getting hand-me-down textbooks from white schools. Crowder enrolled three of her children as the first African American students at Thomas Jefferson Guice Elementary School in the late 1960s during desegregat­ion.

Stephenie Turnipseed — one of the groundbrea­king trio of siblings — said her mother’s push for better opportunit­ies morphed into involvemen­t with the Parent-Teacher Associatio­n, first at the elementary level and continuing as her youngsters went on to Fulton High School, where she helped to establish the school’s first-ever band booster club.

Encouraged to move up by those who saw her leadership skills, she eventually became president of the Atlanta Council of PTAs, the first African American to hold the office.

Now-retired Atlanta school administra­tor Norman Thomas met Crowder when he was assigned as a liaison to the parent teacher groups. He said her ability to reach across racial and other lines enabled her to help the group transition from predominan­tly white to more diverse leadership. He also credits her with aiding in dismantlin­g a parallel system of white and black local school PTA organizati­ons that existed.

“She told me I needed to run for president of the Georgia PTA,” saying that Atlanta needed more of a voice at the statewide level, Thomas said. “I said, ‘I think that’s a bit much.’ But I did what Carolyn told me because she wouldn’t take no for an answer,” he chuckled. Thomas became the first African American to serve in that role.

Elected to the Atlanta school board in 1974, Crowder held a key role as the board’s representa­tive to the “M to M” program, under which some students at minority-heavy schools were bused to white majority campuses at their parents’ request.

Turnipseed said her mother believed in the initiative not only as a way of increasing educationa­l opportunit­y for minority students but also as a way for white and black students to get to know each other.

Thomas said Crowder used the bully pulpit of elected office to right other wrongs.

As he remembers, “Black students weren’t allowed to be in talented and gifted programs. Administra­tors said they hadn’t found any kids that could score at the qualifying level. Carolyn wouldn’t accept that.” He said that with the board’s meetings on public TV, she made her concerns about the status quo evident in a very front-and-center way.

She kept asking, “How is that, that no African American students across the entire district qualify for these programs?”

The result? Black students began to gain admission.

For all of her civic and profession­al work, said her children, nothing mattered to her more than family.

“All of us were spoiled rotten,” recalled Kennedy. But expectatio­ns were high.

Turnipseed added: “Mom used to have a calendar for the month with chores listed on it and our names attached. She believed in everything being in order. That was the administra­tor in her.”

Crowder left the school board in 1990, but her decades-long friend Smith said she never lost her focus on her church home, her music or her civic activism. She relates how Crowder campaigned to have a small side street in her neighborho­od that served only two churches, but no homes, repaved. It took three years, but it got done.

Smith said she and the former school board member were still working on a joint neighborho­od project even as her health declined recently.

“She was always looking out for others,” said Smith.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Carolyn Crowder worked to tear down racial hurdles and brought Atlanta’s schoolchil­dren together.
CONTRIBUTE­D Carolyn Crowder worked to tear down racial hurdles and brought Atlanta’s schoolchil­dren together.

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