Mary Antoinette Brown Sherman (October 27, 1926 – June 3, 2004) was a Liberian educator, and the first woman to serve as president of a university in Africa.
Mary Antoinette Hope Grimes was born in Monrovia, the daughter of Louis Arthur Grimes and Victoria Elizabeth Jellemoh. Her father was a government official who became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Liberia. Her brother Joseph Rudolph Grimes was Liberia's Secretary of State from 1960 to 1972. Her mother was from the Vai ethnic group, and was raised in the household of Joseph J. Cheeseman, the twelfth president of Liberia. Mary Antoinette Grimes was also related to the 15th president of Liberia, Arthur Barclay, and the 18th president, Edwin Barclay. She wrote a history of her Barclay foremothers.
After completing undergraduate studies at Liberia College in 1947, Grimes earn a master's degree in teaching from Radcliffe College in 1949; she completed doctoral studies in education at Cornell University in 1967. Her dissertation was titled "Education and national development in Liberia, 1800-1900."
In 1950, Dr. Brown joined the education faculty at the University of Liberia. Mary Antoinette Brown was appointed Dean of the Teachers' College at the University of Liberia in 1958, and later Vice President for Academic Affairs (1975-1978). She was president of the University of Liberia from 1978 to 1984. During her tenure as president, the university saw expanded facilities and programs, and improved scholarship funding. She also worked on behalf of faculty members against government interference.
In 1980, President Samuel K. Doe attempted to appoint Sherman as his Secretary of Education, but she declined the offer. In 1984, Dr. Sherman was dismissed from the university after the Liberian Army invaded campus with violence, and effectively shut down the school for several years. She relocated to the United States in 1986, where she helped to found the University of Liberia Alumni Association. She also wrote a biography of her mother, published in 2005.