Martha
Walters Averett, 1906-1982
Martha Walters
of New York probably never could have predicted what a trip to Akron
in 1941 would bring - a marriage, a breaking of a color barrier in the
city's hospitals and a lifetime of contributions to her adopted hometown.
Walters had been
born in a predominantly Black neighborhood in Washington, D.C., just
a few blocks from the White House. She went to college there, Howard
University; after graduation, she headed for New York and the Lakeland
School for Nursing. There were hard times in New York during the Great
Depression; but Walters, by then a registered nurse, found work with
the New York Health Department. And there she might have stayed, if
it had not been for that trip to Akron.
She met A.L. Averett,
married and settled down in wartime Akron. Finding work was no problem;
she worked at a doctor's office. Then, in 1946, she decided to apply
as a nurse at Akron City Hospital. No Black nurse had ever worked in
any of the city's hospitals before. Nonetheless, Akron City Hospital
hired her and one more color barrier in medicine was broken.
Estelle Rogers,
her daughter, told the Beacon Journal that there was segregation
in the hospital, "whether it was by floors, wings or sections on
a floor." Averett cared for white patients, some of whom didn't
appreciate it. Nonetheless, Averett worked hard and impressed her supervisors.
She was eventually promoted to supervising nurse.
Just as things
were looking up professionally, Averett suffered a heart attack and
had to retire. But that just opened a new phase to her life. She shifted
her attention to the Akron Community Service Center and Urban League;
she became the first president of the Northside Citizens Council. But,
again, poor health struck her; in 1959 a debilitating stroke left her
bedridden.
This, in turn,
began yet another career. She began counseling troubled teens in 1961.
She treasured the time she spent with these youngsters. "The stories
differ: illegitimate young men with high intelligence and low grades;
desperate daughters sometimes seeking shameful solutions to their troubles;
fear; tension; hidden disease; despair," she told the Beacon
Journal. "These are my children and I thank their parents for
sharing them with me."
Her mixture of
questions "sugar-coated with warmth and compassion" brought
positive results with the teens, the Beacon Journal reported.
Fifteen of her first 17 teens were in college in 1966.
Honors and awards
followed. In 1967, Zeta Phi Beta sorority named her Woman of the Year;
in 1970 she received the Akron Touchdown Club service award; in 1974
she won the Governor's Community Action Award.
Martha Averett
died Aug. 13, 1982 in Akron. She was 76 years old. Urban League Director
Vernon Odom remembered her as "one of Akron's great ladies."
Photo courtesy
of the Beacon Journal.
--Kathleen
L. Endres
