
IOWA WOMEN’S ARCHIVES
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA LIBRARIES
IOWA CITY, IOWA
VIRGINIA
HARPER (1929-1997)
PAPERS, 1940s-1997
1 linear foot
ACQUISITION: The papers (donor no. 279) were donated by Virginia Harper
in 1995 and subsequent years.
ACCESS: The papers are open for research. Materials within the collection cannot be photocopied for users.
COPYRIGHT: Copyright has been transferred to the University of Iowa.
PHOTOGRAPHS: In Box 3.
PROCESSED BY: Natalie S. Brody, 1996; revisions, 1999. [HarperVirginia.doc]
Biography
(Lillie) Virginia Harper was born in Fort Madison, Iowa, on December 23, 1929, the daughter of Dr. Harry Harper, Sr. and Lillie Grinage Harper. She attended St. Joseph's elementary and high schools and graduated from Fort Madison High School in 1946. Harper studied at the State University of Iowa (now the University of Iowa) for three years, at Howard University, and graduated from the College of Medical Technology in Minneapolis. She was an x-ray technician and medical assistant in her family's clinic until it closed in 1977.
Harper's involvement in civil rights issues began during childhood and has continued throughout her life. At the age of eleven Harper and her two sisters refused to sit in the rows reserved for minorities at the local Fort Madison movie theater. In 1946 when only twenty African-American women were enrolled at the University of Iowa, Harper was one of the five who chose to live on campus, in Currier Hall. The others lived at the Iowa Federation Home, which was operated by the Iowa Federation of Colored Women's Clubs.
In 1971 Governor Robert Ray appointed Harper the first African-American woman to serve on the state Board of Public Instruction. In that position she worked towards instituting a human relations course requirement for teachers. In 1979 she was likewise the first African-American woman appointed to the Iowa Board of Parole. Since 1978 Harper has been president of the Fort Madison branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Her other civic activities include work as a volunteer at the Fort Madison penitentiary and as a member of both the Fort Madison Human Rights Commission and the Library Board of Trustees. In 1992 Harper was inducted into the Iowa Women's Hall of Fame in recognition of her commitment to equal rights. Virginia Harper died on September 3, 1997.
The Virginia Harper papers date from the 1940s to 1997 and measure 1 linear foot. The papers are arranged in four series: Biographical information, Correspondence, Civic leadership positions, and Iowa racial issues.
The Biographical information series ([1940s]-1997) consists of correspondence, newspaper clippings, family histories, and memorabilia of the Harper family. Handwritten and typescript copies of "The Dandridge Family History," written by Virginia Harper's great aunt Rosa Dandridge Pryor in 1971, include descriptions of George and Jane Motley Stevens’ and Rufus Dandridge’s lives under slavery and after settling in Lee County ca. 1866. Minutes, newsletters, and lists relating to the annual Harper-Dandridge family reunions are included in this series; the "Harper Reunion Log Book" (1934-1979) can be found in the Harry Harper papers in the University of Iowa Special Collections Department.
The Correspondence series (1950-1987 and undated) comprises letters by Harper, her family, and friends, and includes several written in the 1950s by Clif White, a musician travelling with jazz and swing big bands.
Harper's involvement in local and state activities is documented in the Civic leadership positions series (1963-1987). The series includes materials relevant to her service on the State Board of Public Instruction, the Iowa Board of Parole, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The local NAACP newsletters (1963-1970), which Harper edited, are also part of the series.
The Iowa racial issues series (1961-1988 and undated) comprises diverse materials. It includes information on an African-American statewide communications network; Iowa affirmative action policy; curriculum guides, including "Minority Cultures and Negro History: A Supplement to the Course of Study in Social Studies" (1970) from the Mason City Schools; and various articles on race relations. A sizable portion of the material in the series is devoted to the Highway 61 issue (1968-1976), the location of which the NAACP opposed on the grounds of racial discrimination.
Related Collections
Harry Harper papers, University of Iowa Special Collections Department
Iowa Women's Hall of Fame records
Lois Eichacker papers
Eichacker is Virginia Harper’s sister.
Jacqueline Scott papers
A copy of We Shall Overcome, a
teacher's resource packet compiled by Scott that pertains to African-American
history in Southeast Iowa, has been transferred from Virgina Harper's papers to
Jaqueline Scott's papers.
Box no. Description
Box 1
Biographical information
Personal, 1948-1997 (scattered)
Family
Correspondence, newspaper clippings and miscellaneous,
[194-]-1987
"The
Dandridge Family History," 1971
Harper family reunions, 1979-1985
Correspondence
1950-1970
1973-1987 and undated
Civic leadership positions
Board of Public Instruction
Amish exemption issue, 1971
Memoranda and minutes, 1972-1987
Iowa 2000, 1976
Box 2
Iowa Board of Parole, 1979-1989 (scattered)
National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People
(NAACP)
Correspondence, 1963-1978
Newsletters
1963-1966
1967-1970
Iowa racial issues
Affirmative action policy, 1985, 1988
African-American comunications network,
1985-1986
Curriculum guides, 1970 and undated
Box 3
Highway 61
Correspondence and documents
1968-1974
1975
1976
Newspaper clippings, 1968-1976 and undated
Race relations, 1961, 1968, 1986