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== Early life and education ==
== Early life and education ==
Elder was born in 1927 in [[Lancaster, South Carolina]], and raised in [[Charlotte, North Carolina|Charlotte]]. She was the sixth child of Booker T. and Odessa Clark. She was the sixth child of Booker T. and Odessa Clark. Elder described her childhood as wonderful, and that her family taught her the value of education and religious faith, which have guided her life and career.<ref name=":0" />
Elder was born in 1927 in [[Lancaster, South Carolina]], and raised in [[Charlotte, North Carolina|Charlotte]]. She was the sixth child of Booker T. and Odessa Clark. Elder described her childhood as wonderful, and that her family taught her the value of education and religious faith, which have guided her life and career.<ref name=":0" />


She attended [[West Charlotte High School]] during its inaugural year in 1938. After graduating high school, Elder attended [[Johnson C. Smith University]] for a year but later transferred to [[North Carolina Central University]] to study nursing.<ref name=":0" /> Elder described her experience in North Carolina Central University as "eye-opening," because the university provided opportunities for students to serve their community.<ref name=":0" />
She attended [[West Charlotte High School]] during its inaugural year in 1938. After graduating high school, Elder attended [[Johnson C. Smith University]] for a year but later transferred to [[North Carolina Central University]] to study nursing.<ref name=":0" /> Elder described her experience in North Carolina Central University as "eye-opening," because the university provided opportunities for students to serve their community.<ref name=":0" />

Revision as of 23:44, 7 January 2021

Thereasea Delerine "T.D" Elder (died January 5, 2021 )[1] was the first African American public health nurse in Charlotte, North Carolina.[2]

Early life and education

Elder was born in 1927 in Lancaster, South Carolina, and raised in Charlotte. She was the sixth child of Booker T. and Odessa Clark. Elder described her childhood as wonderful, and that her family taught her the value of education and religious faith, which have guided her life and career.[1]

She attended West Charlotte High School during its inaugural year in 1938. After graduating high school, Elder attended Johnson C. Smith University for a year but later transferred to North Carolina Central University to study nursing.[1] Elder described her experience in North Carolina Central University as "eye-opening," because the university provided opportunities for students to serve their community.[1]

Career

Elder went to work at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Charlotte in 1948. [3] That same year she married Willie Elder, a World War II veteran who ran a service station. During her time at Good Samaritan Hospital, she completed a certificate program in public health nursing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. [3] In 1962 she started working as a public health nurse for Mecklenburg County, where she would go into communities and perform health checks or administers [1]prescribed medication. Her success was measured by the decreased numbers of absences in schools and a greater health literacy among the families she was responsible for. [3]

Mecklenburg County tasked Elder with the responsibility of breaking the color barrier in public health service.[3] Along with another African American nurse, she was assigned to predominantly white districts. She experienced skepticism and received disrespectful language. Elder even treated patients in Ku Klux Klan territory within Charlotte.[2] Over time, she gained the same kind of relationship from her new patients that she received from her previous patients. [3]

Elder worked with the Mecklenburg County Health Department until her retirement in 1989. [4]

Elder also devoted herself to community improvement, earning local and state recognition. She was the president of the Greenville Historical Association was an active member of the National Association of Negro Business and Professional Women. She founded the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Black Historical Society and was on the Board of Greater Carolinas Chapter of the American Red Cross. She was recognized in 2013 by Johnson C. Smith for her work in strengthening the Rockwell neighborhood. [3]

In 2001, Governor Mike Easley conferred upon her the Order of the Long-Leaf Pine for doing "great service to [her] community the state" [3]The Thereasea Clark Elder Neighborhood Park was created in her honor by the Charlotte Parks and Rec. Department.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Bose, Devna (6 January 2021). "'Charlotte icon' Thereasea Elder, Black nurse who integrated public health, dies at 93". The Charlotte Observer. Rodney Mahone. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  2. ^ a b Jameson, Tonya (October 18, 2016). "Thereasea Elder Treated Patients In NC KKK Communities". Praise 100.9. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Thereasea Clark Elder".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "Remembering Thereasea Elder, Mecklenburg County's first Black public health nurse".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)