Lucy Slowe

A photographic portrait taken of Lucy Diggs Slowe by her sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha, which she helped to found in 1908 (Source: Wikipedia)

Howard University's First Dean of Women Had to Fight to Keep Her Brookland Home

Returning to campus for the new school year in 1937, Howard University’s students received grim news: one of their deans, Lucy Diggs Slowe, was “reputed critically ill with pleurisy. Her condition was such on Tuesday that relatives were called to her bedside.” After 15 years at the university, Slowe was a staple to the campus and its students – many of the women enrolled at the college saw her has a mentor and advocate for their education at Howard.

What the headline didn’t mention was what some believed was the cause of her declining health. There were rumblings that it was the efforts of key Howard University staff that had caused her illness, and they wouldn’t stop until Slowe left the school for good.

Who was Lucy Diggs Slowe, and what led to such harsh conflict between her and the university?

Last Updated: May 13, 2022