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Eleanor Ragsdale

Eleanor Ragsdale
Eleanor Ragsdale.jpg
Born Eleanor Dickey
February 23, 1926
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died May 5, 1998(1998-05-05) (aged 72)
Phoenix, Arizona
Alma mater Cheyney University of Pennsylvania
Occupation Educator, real estate agent, activist
Known for Activism in the African-American Civil Rights Movement
Spouse(s) Lincoln Ragsdale (m. 1949)

Eleanor Dickey Ragsdale (February 23, 1926 – May 5, 1998) was a distinguished and influential educator, entrepreneur, and activist in the African-American Civil Rights Movement in the Phoenix area.

Ragsdale graduated from Cheyney University of Pennsylvania in 1947 with a bachelor's degree in education. Shortly after graduating, she relocated to Phoenix, Arizona to accept a position as a kindergarten teacher at Dunbar Elementary School. In 1949 she married Lincoln Ragsdale, her partner in entrepreneurship and activism in Phoenix's segregated communities.

Ragsdale was an active member of community organizations and became a charter member of the local National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Phoenix Urban League, and Greater Phoenix Council for Civic Unity. She also served as a member of The Links, Incorporated and clubs and associations advocating women's rights.

In the 1960s Ragsdale collaborated with Grace Gill-Olivarez to desegregate schools and to promote better educational opportunities for Mexican American, African American, and other minority students. "Eleanor Ragsdale helped Gill-Olivarez solicit funds to defray the costs for a number of Mexican American high school students to attend evening job-training workshops, and she also worked with administrators at ASU to establish financial aid programs for both incoming African American and Mexican American students". Yet, even as Ragsdale and her colleagues won a victory in desegregating Phoenix schools in 1953, enrollment of white students in these schools dropped, leaving minority students in underfunded, poorly administered schools which created new racial tensions between the African American and Mexican American communities. Despite Ragsdale's efforts, no unified coalition was able to form.


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