Nearly
60 years ago, eight black students – known as the Memphis State Eight –
integrated the former Memphis State University. Before the name was changed to
the University of Memphis in 1994, J. Millard (Jack) Smith, who was president from
1946 to 1960, reportedly said, “No blacks shall be admitted as long as I’m
president.”
Dr.
Shirley Raines, the affable president of the U of M from 2001 to 2013, had no
problem acknowledging the history-making trailblazers who shattered the color
barrier in 1959: Luther McClellan, Marvis Kneeland Jones, Ralph Prater, John
Simpson, Bertha Mae Rogers Looney, Eleanor Gandy, Rose Blakney-Love and Sammie
Burnett Johnson.
She
pointed out two of them among the audience – McClellan and Looney – who came to hear her expatiate on her new book during a
book talk and book signing Jan. 26 at Novel Memphis in the Laurelwood Shopping
Center.
Raines
is a capable storyteller, an effervescent spirit, which is quite evident in the
stories she’s woven together comprising the book “An Uncommon Journey: Leadership
Lessons from a Preschool Teacher Who Became a University President.”
“The
stories are told from the experiences that you helped me live,” said Raines, speaker,
consultant and author, interacting with the surrounding audience.
Dr. Shirley Raines autographs a copy of her book for Luther McClellan.
|
The
Memphis State Eight gets a nod in the book. She first recognized the
significance of their rightful place in history and hosted a former dinner and
reception in their honor on campus in 2006. A historical marker was erected in
front of the Administration Building in 2012.
Much
of the credit goes to Markhum “Mark” L. Stansbury Sr., then
special assistant to Raines and a longtime luminary over the airwaves at 1070
WDIA. He didn’t want the group to be forgotten and their determination to pursue
a college education under dire conditions to be omitted from the annals of
history.
“Dr. Raines was really a great
president. She was sincere and open to change. And I appreciate her sincerity,”
said McClellan, who left Memphis in 1962 during his sophomore year at the
university.
“It’s amazing. It’s overwhelming,”
added Looney, acknowledging the attention the group has been receiving and the
“small contribution” that she said she’d made during that turbulent era in Memphis’
history.
She didn’t want to speak ill will of
Smith during his day; however, she did speak favorably of Raines: “Dr. Raines
is awesome. It reflects the leadership she gave to the university.”
“They mean so much to me,” said Raines, recognizing
her supporters and others in the audience (including Stansbury) who helped to
shape her career as a leader and an academic. She rose from humble beginnings
on a sharecropper’s farm in Bells, Tenn., to serving a stint in early childhood
education, to serving at the helm of the university as its first female
president.
Bells
is a quaint city in Crocket County, Tenn., 72.9 miles from her home in Memphis
“to be exact,” said Raines, who first eyed the big city of Memphis while
growing up in Bells.
“Memphis
was always special to me,” she told the audience. “I always wanted to live in
Memphis…if the cotton crop was good.”
Born
on the farm, Raines’ hardworking parents didn’t quite see the sunny side of an education
after high school. Her mother had a 12th-grade education, she said, and her
father made it to eighth-grade.
Why
write the book?
“I
wrote this book to tell my stories, and to inspire leaders, especially aspiring
women leaders, who are wondering if they should take their next leadership
step,” Raines explained in the book’s preface.
She’s
had some invaluable experiences and life lessons on her journey from Bells to
Memphis and developed the skillset that would catapult her as a formidable
leader tasked with an awesome responsibility. This is the crux of the book.
The
manuscript started out at 600 pages, she said, “but my editor said nobody would
buy it. So I cut it to 300 pages.” Then she whittled the book down again to
about “170-something” pages.
The
book starts out with Raines’ formative years and builds from there until she
lands the big enchilada at the U of M that naysayers, including her husband,
didn’t think she would be selected.
“I
was really nervous and really wanted the job,” said Raines, who interviewed
with the search committee. “My husband told me that I couldn’t do it. So I had
to do it.”
Laughter
followed.
She
did it her way and set the U of M on a trajectory going forward. She created
The Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change, for example, and raised
millions for the U of M Community Health Building.
“It
was a great university before we got there, but we made it better,” Raines said
unapologetically, owing her success to the life-lessons she learned over the
years and her ability to lead the way.
“I
always thought Dr. Raines was a great person. But on yesterday (Jan. 26), her
stock went up with me,” said Stansbury, who shared the same sentiments about
Raines with his radio listening audience.
No comments:
Post a Comment