Christia Adair Explained

Christia Adair
Birth Date:October 22, 1893
Birth Place:Victoria, Texas
Death Date:December 31, 1989 (aged 96)
Death Place:Houston, Texas
Alma Mater:Samuel Huston College
Prairie View State Normal and Industrial College
Occupation:Teacher
Executive Secretary, Houston NAACP
Co-founder, Harris County Democrats
Honours:Texas Women's Hall of Fame, 1984

Christia V. Daniels Adair (October 22, 1893 – December 31, 1989) was an African-American suffragist and civil rights worker based in Texas. There is a mural in Texas about her life, displayed in a county park which is named for her.

Early life and education

Christia V. Daniels was born October 22, 1893, in Victoria, Texas, and grew up in Edna, Texas,[1] the daughter of Ada Crosby Daniels, a laundress, and Hardy Daniels, who had a hauling business.[2] She had an older half-sister whom her mother had legally adopted, and two younger brothers.[3] Her early life was heavily influenced by her Christian religion, which she professed at 11, and her involvement with the Methodist Church. She attended Samuel Huston College, which her godfather co-founded and trained to teach at the Prairie View State Normal and Industrial College, graduating in 1915.[4]

Career

Christia Daniels taught at public schools in Edna for three years and then left teaching in 1918 after she married Elbert H. Adair, a brakeman for the Missouri-Pacific Railroad, and moved to Kingsville, Texas. Here, she joined a women's group and fought against gambling establishments and organized petition drives for women's suffrage. Despite the success of the women's suffrage movement, she was prevented from voting in Texas and turned away from a polling place due to state decreeing that black Americans could not vote in primaries, even though she was allowed to register to vote.[5] This incident prompted Adair to begin working with the civil rights movement.[6] Her work in the community increased when the trends of racial discrimination at the time became more prevalent.

She moved to Houston in 1925, and joined the city's chapter of the NAACP in 1943.[7] She served the chapter as executive secretary[8] from 1949 or 1950 to 1959,[9] through the period of the landmark Smith v. Allwright case. After the case was decided in favor of Smith, the Houston chapter of the NAACP became a popular target for bomb threats. She refused to divulge the group's membership rolls to police due to the belief that the Houston police were trying to procure the list in order to break up the chapter, under the guise of claims of barratry. She was one of the chapter members who testified during the trial regarding the attempted seizure of the chapter's records.

Adair worked on desegregation of the Houston Public Library, airport, hospital, and public transit facilities, as well as department store dressing rooms. She was part of the effort to make black Texans eligible to serve on juries, and to be hired for county jobs. Adair co-founded the Harris County Democrats, an integrated organization, and in 1966 was the first African-American woman elected to the state's Democratic Executive Committee (though she refused her seat on the committee in protest).[10] [11] She was also active in the Methodist Episcopal Church from childhood, and was the first woman on the denomination's general board.

Adair was honored during her lifetime, as the namesake of a county park and community center in Houston,[12] which includes a John T. Biggers mural about her life;[13] and in 1984 when she was inducted into the Texas Women's Hall of Fame.[14] She also gave an interview in 1977 to the Black Women Oral History Project at Harvard's Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America.[15]

Personal life and legacy

Christia Daniels was widowed in 1943 and died in 1989 at 96.

Her papers are archived in the collection of the Houston Public Library, within the African American Library at the Gregory School in the Fourth Ward.[16]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Salem, Dorothy C.. African American Women. Garland Publishing. 1993. 0-8240-9782-3. New York and London. 1. registration.
  2. Bernadette Pruitt, The Other Great Migration: The Movement of Rural African Americans to Houston, 1900-1941 (Texas A&M University Press 2013): 176.
  3. Web site: Christia Adair. Transcript HOLLIS for Archival Discovery. hollisarchives.lib.harvard.edu. en. 2018-11-05.
  4. Nancy Baker Jones, "Christia V. Daniels Adair" Handbook of Texas Online (accessed July 4, 2016).
  5. Rosalyn Terborg-Penn, African-American Women in the Struggle for the Vote, 1850-1920 (Indiana University Press 1998): 147-148.
  6. Web site: Christia Adair Collection MSS.0017 An Inventory of her Records at the African American Library at the Gregory School, Houston Public Library. legacy.lib.utexas.edu . en.
  7. O. B. Lloyd Jr. "NAACP Puts Top Witness on Stand" Pampa Daily News (October 18, 1956): 1. via Newspapers.com
  8. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/5788983/mrs_c_v_adair_testifies_1956/ "End is Near in Trial to Oust NAACP"
  9. Linda L. Black, "Female community leaders in Houston, Texas: a study of the education of Ima Hogg and Christia Daniels Adair" (PhD diss., 2008, Texas A&M University): 155.
  10. https://www.newspapers.com/clip/5789044/cv_adair_and_others_refuse_to_be_seated/ "Liberal Demos Refuse to Serve on Committee"
  11. Karen Gibson, Texas History for Kids: Lone Star Lives and Legends, with 21 Activities (Chicago Review Press 2015): 104.
  12. Web site: Christia V. Adair Park. Parks & Park Reservations. Harris County Precinct One.
  13. Ollie Jensen Theisen, Walls that Speak: The Murals of John Thomas Biggers (University of North Texas Press 2010): 64.
  14. http://www.twu.edu/twhf/tw-adair.asp Christia V. Daniels Adair
  15. Black Women Oral History Project. Interviews, 1976-1981. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:RAD.SCHL:10039842. OH-31. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University, Cambridge MA.
  16. http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/aalgs/00016/aal-00016.html Christia Adair Collection