Creator

Tony Record

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Identifier

10021608

Description

Opal Lee peruses items donated to the Tarrant County Black Historical and Genealogical Society. Clipping reads "When Opal Lee retired from Fort Worth schools in 1976, ending a 15-year career in teaching and counseling, she envisioned a life of exotic travel. But her husband, Dale, who retired a year later, 'was a homebody,' Lee said. 'And I decided I didn't just want to sit at home.' Opal Lee has not stayed home. Lee helped start the Tarrant County Black Historical and Genealogical Society, an archives of Black history on the city's near southside, and she began to develop into a near legendary volunteer in her community. Today her name and that of the historical society's founder, Lenora Rolla, have become almost synonymous with the center, a storehouse of photographs, literature, memorabilia, and other artifacts of Black life. Officially, Lee, 63, is corresponding secretary of the Historical and Genealogical Society, but in reality she is curator, fundraiser, program coordinator, and promoter--duties she shares with Rolla, 86, the center's executive director."

Archival Date

1990-04-16

Collection Name

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection

Collection Number

AR406-6-8976 [Frame 4A]

Original Format

Negatives, Color

File Format

JPG

Rights

Rights held by The University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, Special Collections. Any use of content downloaded or printed from this page is limited to non-commercial personal or educational use, including fair use as directed by U.S. copyright laws. For more information or for reproduction requests, please contact UTA Special Collections by emailing spcoref@uta.edu.

Subjects

African American educators

Names

Lee, Opal, 1926-; Tarrant County Black Historical and Genealogical Society

Subjects

African American educators

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