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Hazel Mountain Walker {31 Days of Black Women}

Posted March 8th, 2010 in 31 Days oF Black Women and tagged , , , , , by Super Hussy

Hazel Mountain Walker was born the daughter of Charles and Alice (Bronson) Mountain. Walker married George Herbert Walker on June 28, 1922. Hazel attended Cleveland Normal Training School and in 1909 earned a Bachelor’s and Master’s in Education from Western Reserve University. During the summers, when she was not teaching, Hazel worked towards a Law Degree at Baldwin-Wallace College where she earned her degree and passed the bar in 1919;  her motivation was not to become a lawyer but rather to prove that black women could become lawyers.

Walker taught students who came from homes where no English was spoken and/or their families could not read at the Mayflower Elementary School from 1909-36.   She also tutored black children from the juvenile court system who were from the South and having trouble adjusting to Cleveland schools. She became principal at Rutherford B. Hayes Elementary School in 1936 and in 1954 became the principal at George Washington Carver Elementary School until she retired in 1958.  In 1961 Hazel was elected to serve on the Ohio State Board of Education;  she resigned in 1963 and then moved out of state.

Walker was one of the first African Americans to be a part of the Women’s City Club. Walker is attributed with naming Karamu House (a theatre which nurtured Black talent) in 1924 where she was a member and actress. She was a member of the Cuyahoga County Republican Party executive committee during the 1930s.

For more information, visit:

Encyclopedia of Cleveland History

Baldwin-Wallace College

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