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Freddye Harper Williams

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Freddye H. Williams, Freddye Harper, and Freddye Williams should link here

Freddye Harper Williams (January 9, 1917 - 2001) was a newspaper columnist, management analyst, and state legislator in Oklahoma. She graduated as the valedictorian from Douglass High School.[1] She served five terms in the Oklahoma House of Representatives. She was a Democrst.[2] She represented the 99th district.[3]

Fresdye Harper was born in Bay Springs, Mississippi to Frederick G. Harper and Mittie Jo Harper. His family moved to Pine Bluff, Arkansas and then Oklahoma City when he was a child.[1]

She married Calvin Williams. They had two sons and a daughter.[1][2]

She began her career as a newspaper columnist for the Black Dispatch and then worked for [[Tinker Air Force Base for some 30 years. She served on Oklahoma City's Board of Education from 1975 to 1980 and then served five terms in the Oklahoma House of a Representatives until 1990. She was also involved in numerous civic organizations.[1][2]

At one point she was fired from her Tinker Air Force base job because of her work at the Black Dispatch newspaper and its owner Roscoe Dunjee who was associated with Communist organizations.[4]

She was inducted into the Oklahoma Afro-American Hall of Fame in 1985.[1] The National Collegiate Honors Council awards a Freddye T. Davy Student Scholarship.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Freddye H. Williams". The Oklahoman.
  2. ^ a b c "Page 46". digitalprairie.ok.gov.
  3. ^ "State Yellow Book". Monitor Publishing Company. December 11, 1990 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Jr, Clarence Mitchell (October 25, 2022). "The Papers of Clarence Mitchell Jr., Volume VI: The Struggle to Pass the 1960 Civil Rights Act, 1959–1960". Ohio University Press – via Google Books.