Details for Myra Lillian Davis Hemmings

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507017358

Data

Marker Number 17358
Atlas Number 5507017358
Marker Title Myra Lillian Davis Hemmings
Index Entry Hemmings, Myra Lillian Davis
Address 328 N. Pine St.
City San Antonio
County Bexar
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 551398
UTM Northing 3255044
Subject Codes African American, Education, Fine Arts; women
Marker Year 2012
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Myra Davis Hemmings Resource Center. Southeast corner N. Pine and E. Crockett.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text (August 30, 1895 - December 8, 1968) African American educator, actress, and community activist Myra Hemmings was born in Gonzales, Texas to Henry and Susan (Dement) Davis. The family moved to San Antonio, where Myra graduated from Riverside High School in 1909. She attended Howard University in Washington, D.C., where on Jan. 13, 1913 she became one of 22 founders of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority, the primary goals of which were to use their collective strength to promote educational excellence and to provide assistance to those in need. Their first public act was to participate in the women's suffrage procession down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington on Mar. 3, 1913, the day before Woodrow Wilson's presidential inauguration. Hemmings graduated from Howard in May 1913 and returned to begin her teaching career with the San Antonio Independent School District. She taught English and drama at Frederick Douglass and Phyllis Wheatley high schools for more than fifty years, influencing countless students to love performing arts and literature. Hemmings organized the San Antonio chapter of Delta Sigma Theta on Aug. 16, 1933 and served as its first president. Today there are more than 950 chapters and more than 250,000 members worldwide. Myra loved the theater and acting. In 1922, she married John (Pop) Hemmings, a former Broadway actor. Together they organized the Phyllis Wheatley Dramatic Guild Players. Their productions, in which she often acted, shaped the cultural life of Black San Antonioans. She directed more than twenty dramatic plays and appeared in three feature films: "Marching On!" (1943), "Go Down, Death!" (1944) and "The Girl in Room 20" (1946). Hemmings received her Master of Arts degree in Drama from Northwestern University in 1937. Myra Hemmings' prolific achievements continue to influence and inspire the community and the world. (2012)
ATLAS_NUM=5507017358

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