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Notes from the Chancellor » Gala Celebrates African American Achievement


Gala Celebrates African American Achievement

Nearly 900 people gathered at a gala on September 23 to celebrate fifty years of African American achievement at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. It was part of UT's year-long celebration commemorating the first black undergraduates to enroll at UT.

Today's students owe a debt of gratitude to the brave men and women who broke down the walls of segregation at the university. The events of the past have brought us to where we need to stand today—a campus open to and committed to diversity.

UT Trustee Anne Holt Blackburn, a 1973 alumna and Emmy-award-winning anchor for Nashville's WKRN-TV, served as the mistress of ceremonies at the gala.

The large crowd honored UT administrator Theotis Robinson and the families of Charles Blair and the late Willie May Gillespie—the first undergraduates to enter UT Knoxville— with a standing ovation.

The celebration, organized by the fiftieth anniversary committee, featured musical and dramatic performances highlighting the challenges and accomplishments of the last five decades.

UT students, faculty, and staff, along with community members, were part of the music and dramatic production. The All Campus Theatre and Strange Fruit Productions student groups joined forces to highlight the 1980s.

The families of Gene Mitchell Gray, the first African American graduate school student, and Lincoln Anderson Blackney, the first African American law school student, were also recognized at the celebration. Many African American achievers attended, including Brenda Peel, the first UT African American undergraduate to obtain a degree; Lester McClain, the first African American scholarship athlete, who played football in 1967; and Wade Houston, the first African American basketball coach in the Southeastern Conference.

Among the many other individuals and groups celebrated for achievement was the late Fred Brown, who founded UT's Minority Engineering Scholarship program. Brown nurtured many students, including UT Trustee Spruell Driver, a 1987 engineering graduate. Driver was named a Torchbearer upon graduation and went to Duke University to earn a law degree. He also was celebrated at the event as the first African American president of the UT National Alumni Association.

Music faculty member Donald Brown, a three-time Grammy nominee and internationally renowned jazz pianist, played "Someday We Will Be Free," accompanied by vocalist Kelle Jolly.

The program reflected on the role of sports in UT's African American achievement. Larry Robinson is the first African American to receive a scholarship for UT's varsity basketball team; linebacker Jackie Walker became the first African American football team captain; and Condredge Holloway was named the school's first African American football quarterback.

UT alumna Benita Fitzgerald became the first African American to win a gold medal in the Olympic 100-meter hurdles. Fitzgerald visited the campus in February to begin this year's celebration.

UT junior Jessica Session gave a riveting slam poetry performance, which was accompanied by vocalist Shana Ward, pianist Kristopher Tucker, and cellist Jeremiah Welch, all of whom are UT undergraduates. Session first performed for the UT community in February at a ceremony after a campus march to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary.

The gala ended with the university's Alma Mater, sung first in traditional style and then reworked into a modern arrangement for the grand finale, which showcased all the evening's performers.

To read more about UT's African American history and to view a photo slideshow of the gala, visit Celebrating 50 years of African American Achievement.