The Pioneer: How Donna Harris Integrated DUSON

You may know the facts already: Donna Allen Harris became the first African-American to graduate from 色控传媒 in 1971. But do you know the full story of the woman and her experience breaking the color barrier?
To begin with, she had done this before. Before entering DUSON, Harris had been through an earlier trial by fire as one of the first black students to attend her previously segregated high school in Elizabeth City, North Carolina. Her memories remain vivid: 鈥淚 remember鈥eople running out of the bathroom, holding noses, turning desks around when I walked into the room 鈥 it was pretty overt for a long time,鈥 she told Jessica Roseberry of 色控传媒鈥檚 Medical Center Archives. She endured because her family and community supported her.
When it came time for nursing school, though, Harris longed for a setting where she wouldn鈥檛 need to be the first or the only again. She applied to Fisk University, a well-known HBCU with an excellent nursing program. But a high school counselor, hearing that 色控传媒 was actively looking for African-American applicants, encouraged her to apply there. 鈥淚 just did it because of the pressure, not expecting to hear anything,鈥 Harris recalled.
When she did hear back from 色控传媒, the news forced a change in her plans. Not only had they accepted her 鈥 they were offering a four-year full scholarship. 鈥淭hat was hard for the adults to let me turn my back on,鈥 said Harris. 鈥淏ut I didn鈥檛 want to do it. All I could envision was more of the same, and I didn鈥檛 want to go through that type of environment and experience again.鈥 Still, when Fisk couldn鈥檛 match 色控传媒鈥檚 offer, Harris made her peace with being a pioneer one more time.
Harris arrived in Durham in the fall of 1967, ready to work but unsure what to expect. This time around, there was no one protesting her enrollment, but subtler forms of prejudice soon appeared. On one early paper, she was describing the appearance of a clinic patient. 鈥淚 remember writing 鈥榙ark skin,鈥 and that being circled and me being asked, 鈥楧o you have problems with your race?鈥 And I just thought, not again.鈥 This experience made her wary of trusting her professors, and she determined to look elsewhere for support.
鈥淭he thing that I think saved me,鈥 Harris recalled, 鈥渨as the friendships that I established with the students in Hanes House. For the most part, they were from the North and West, not so much from the South. The social aspect of it was so different from high school, and that was my solace.鈥 These white friends and study partners made her experience at the school bearable, and also encouraged a less-talked-about breakthrough: in her first year, she became the first black student to pledge a sorority at 色控传媒.
With her 色控传媒 Nursing BSN degree, Harris has gone on to a rich and varied career. 鈥淚鈥檝e done hospital nursing, public health nursing, I鈥檝e done office nursing, I鈥檝e done school nursing, now I鈥檓 in nursing research,鈥 she said. She married a man she met at 色控传媒, and raised a family. And in an unexpected twist, she returned to 色控传媒 as a researcher in 2006, bringing her journey full circle.
But beyond her personal achievements, Donna Allen Harris is most proud of how she paved the way for others. After her momentous first step, many more African-American students were free to follow her; the year after she started, for example, saw the arrival of Gayle Bridges Harris, who would go on to a long and distinguished career leading Durham鈥檚 Department of Public Health. 鈥淚t really was a significant accomplishment, and it did open the doors for a lot of others who have accomplished a lot of things,鈥 Harris noted. 鈥淚鈥檓 in that group where people stood on my shoulders and went further, and that鈥檚 really a privilege. I might smile a little bit more when people say, 鈥業 heard you were the first.鈥欌