Age, Biography and Wiki
Thelma Stevens was born on 1902 in Montgomery County, Mississippi. Discover Thelma Stevens's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 88 years old?
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Age |
88 years old |
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Born |
1902 |
Birthday |
1902 |
Birthplace |
Montgomery County, Mississippi |
Date of death |
1990 - Asheville, NC Asheville, NC |
Died Place |
Asheville, NC |
Nationality |
United States |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1902.
She is a member of famous with the age 88 years old group.
Thelma Stevens Height, Weight & Measurements
At 88 years old, Thelma Stevens height not available right now. We will update Thelma Stevens's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Thelma Stevens Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Thelma Stevens worth at the age of 88 years old? Thelma Stevens’s income source is mostly from being a successful . She is from United States. We have estimated
Thelma Stevens's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Under Review |
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Pending |
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Under Review |
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Thelma Stevens Social Network
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Timeline
At the end of her life, Thelma Stevens lived at Brooks-Howell Home, a retirement community founded to care for UMC deaconesses and missionaries in Asheville, North Carolina. She died in Asheville on December 18, 1990 due to complications from a stroke. She left behind no immediate family. Stevens is remembered fondly for her racial justice work.
Stevens' work with the Woman's Division challenged her assumption that the Church was irrelevant to racial justice work. Through her work, she "interpreted racial equality and its meaning for Christian life to Methodist women". The Woman's Division raised their own funds rather than relying on the Methodist Church for funding, and therefore could enact more progressive policies and practices than were in place in the Methodist Church at large. In her position, Stevens worked closely with the General Board of Christian Social Concerns and the president of the Woman's Division (Sadie Wilson Tillman) to create the Church Center for the United Nations in New York City, which was built in 1963 and financed by the Woman's Division. The Church Center collaborated with women's groups around the world in support of universal human rights.
Additionally, Stevens drafted a Charter for Racial Policies to desegregate the Woman's Division, which the division adopted in 1952. She followed this up by writing a broader Charter in 1962 requiring the elimination of discrimination within the entire Methodist Church, which was adopted by the General Conference in 1964.
Also in 1948, Stevens hired Pauli Murray to research and gather information concerning states' laws on race and color and city ordinances (primarily known as Jim Crow Laws) and create a pamphlet that could be distributed to Methodist institutions and governing agencies. In late 1949, Murray presented the research to the Woman's Division. Rather than writing a pamphlet, Murray had written four volumes on state laws around race. Murray's compilation was published by the Woman's Division in 1951 as States' Laws on Race and Color, a text which was used in the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision. Thurgood Marshall called States' Laws on Race and Color "The Bible" for civil rights legislation. States' Laws on Race and Color contributed to a later publication entitled "Charter for Racial Justice in an Interdependent Global Community," which The United Methodist General Conference adopted as denominational policy in 1980.
Stevens was relentless in her pursuit of racial equality and integration. The Woman's Missionary Council of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South went on record in 1939 to oppose the creation of the Central Jurisdiction, a conference created to formalize segregation when the Methodist Episcopal Church, Methodist Episcopal Church South, and Methodist Protestant Church merged to become The Methodist Church. In 1944, Stevens continued the activism of the Woman's Missionary Council by taking the floor at the Methodist General Conference and demanding that meetings take place in locations that hosted Black people as well as white people. While she was laughed at in this meeting, the Woman's Division was the first branch of the Methodist Church to formally call for the abolition of the racially-segregated Central Jurisdiction in 1948.
In 1938, Stevens was asked to be the Superintendent of Christian Social Relations and Local Church Activities, one of the three major departments of the Women's Missionary Council of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. The woman who held the position at the time was planning to retire before the Methodist Church, the Methodist Episcopal Church, and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South merged to become the Methodist Church. In 1939, Stevens accepted the position, moved to New York, and became the senior executive staff of the newly combined Christian Social Relations Department of the Woman's Division of the Methodist Church.
While she doubted the church's commitment and relevance in antiracism conversations, she made a career of advocating for racial equality and interpreting its meaning in the Woman's Division of The Methodist Church. In 1938, Stevens organized the first interracial conference for Methodist women, held at Paine College, a Methodist-supported HBCU in Augusta, Georgia.
The Bethlehem Center housed a kindergarten and a weekly Bible school. The Center also served as a meeting place for women's clubs and classes, and acted as a gathering place for local ministers. Eventually, the Center bought a piece of land, built a camp, served the African American rural community, and ran the only gymnasium for the Black community in Georgia. Stevens worked at the Bethlehem Center from 1928–1939.
In 1922, Thelma Stevens was offered a scholarship at the State Teachers College (now University of Southern Mississippi at Hattiesburg). During this time, she angered the college president by inviting Black teachers to discussion sessions with white teachers. After graduating in 1925, she had a yearlong tenure teaching at a junior college in Perkinston, Mississippi, where she worked closely with Black teachers to secure resources for underfunded school programs. While Stevens was initially interested in working with the YWCA because of the organization's commitment to racial justice initiatives, a recruiter at the Methodist Board of Missions in Nashville persuaded her to attend Scarritt College for Christian Workers in Nashville, Tennessee through a scholarship. Built with funds raised by the Women's Missionary Societies of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, Scarritt primarily trained social workers, deaconesses, and Methodist missionaries. Stevens graduated from Scarritt in 1928.
After graduating high school in 1919, Stevens passed a county teaching exam and taught high school in Kemper County, Mississippi for three years. During that time, a group of high school students that Stevens coached in basketball tricked Stevens into taking a bus ride with them to witness a lynching. This formative experience when Stevens was nineteen years of age prompted her involvement in racial justice activism.
Before Stevens signed her Tennessee teaching contract, the Methodists changed their evaluation of her and offered her a position as the Director of the Bethlehem Center in Augusta, Georgia. The Bethlehem Center, founded in 1911 by the Women's Missionary Council of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, was one of the oldest community centers for African-Americans in the United States. The Methodist Church asked Stevens to conduct research to determine the type of new facility the Bethlehem Center should build. After a year in Augusta, Stevens proposed moving the center to a more centralized location and building a gym for children.
Thelma Stevens (1902–1990) was a Methodist advocate for social and racial justice. From a young age, she dedicated herself to studying and working in favor of integration and racial equality in the United States. From her early career as a teacher in rural Mississippi, to her position as Director of the Bethlehem Center in Augusta, Georgia, to her work in the Woman's Division of The Methodist Church, Stevens contributed to the Civil Rights Movement.
Thelma Stevens was born to Ben and Ida Stevens in 1902 in Montgomery County, Mississippi. She described her family as consisting of white sharecroppers. The youngest of nine, three of Stevens' siblings died before she was born. When she was six years old, her mother died and her father remarried. At age ten, following the death of her father, she went to live with her sister in Slate Springs, Mississippi, whose husband pastored a Methodist Episcopal Church, South.