Simond, Ada DeBlanc

Ada DeBlanc was born in Lake Charles, La on November 14, 1903 to a creole couple, Mathilda and Gilbert DeBlanc. During these early years, the family was farming in New Iberia near the Olivia on the Bayou Teche. The oldest of six children, Ada, along with her siblings and mother, learned just enough English to read a prayer book and cathecism. While living in Lake Charles, she briefly attended a catholic boarding school, but had to leave after developing pellagra, a niacin deficiency common in the Southern United States during the early twentieth century. In 1941, when Ada was 11 years old, the DeBlancs moved to Austin where her father had secured a position as a porter for Murray Graham Drug Store, located at Congress Ave and 9th St. The family initially lived in the African-American community of Wheatville but, at the urging of friends, established itself in the growing African-American community of east Austin.

In Austin, the DeBlanc children learned English in the public school system. Ada went on to become the first person in her family to receive a formal education. By 1921, she had earned an associate's degree in business administration from Samuel Huston College. For 13 years, she worked in a variety of administrative jobs in Austin and Prarie View. She married Aubrey Askey and they had three children--Grace, Gilbert and Verna Jo. In 1934, after her children were in school, she earned a bachelor of science degree in Homemaking and Family Life. Two years later, she earned a master's in the same field from Iowa State University. From 1938-1942, she accepted a position as head of Home and Family Life at Tillotsen College. During this time, her husband, Aubrey Askey, died and she married physician Charles Yerwood. In 1940, at the age of 37, Ada found herself widowed for a second time. Nine years later, she married Luther Simond, a man 18 years her junior, who later served as principal at Ridgetop Elementary School. Inspired by Yerwood about the importance of health education, Simond went on to became a public health representative for the Texas Tuberculosis Association, in 1942, a post she held for 25 years. As a health educator, she traveled around Texas organizing community support for the development of health and disease prevention resources in under-served communities. Following mandatory retirement at age 65 from the Tuberculosis Association, she worked in a similar capacity until the age of 70 for the State Department of Public Health. Following a second mandatory retirement in 1972, she resumed working for a additional three years as a bailiff for the 53rd District Court at the request of her long-time friend, Judge Herman Jones.

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2016-08-14 08:08:48 am

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