Dr. Walter Washington
A Legacy of Leadership
The Alcorn State University family is deeply saddened at the loss of President Emeritus Dr. Walter Washington, a true pioneer in the Higher Education arena. Dr. Washington departed this life Wednesday, December 1, 1999 at St. Dominic Hospital, Jackson, Mississippi. He was 76.
Dr. Washington retired from Alcorn State University in 1994 after 25 years of service. Prior to being appointed president of Alcorn in 1969, he was President of what was then Utica Junior College for twelve years. The combined 37 years of continuous service made him the longest serving college president in Mississippi and around the nation.
Biographical Info
| Dr. Washington was a native of Hazlehurst, Mississippi. He is survived by his wife of fifty years, Dr. Carolyn Carter Washington, a retired professor from Alcorn State University, two sisters, and a host of nieces and nephews, and other relatives and friends. |
Educational Pursuits
Dr. Washington
received the Bachelor of Arts degree from Tougaloo College; the Master of Science degree
from Indiana University; the Education Specialist from Peabody College; a certificate in
Alcoholic Studies from Yale University; the doctorate from the University of
Southern Mississippi; and attended Harvard University's Institute for Educational
Management in 1988. He also received the following honorary degrees: Doctor of Laws from
Tougaloo College, Doctor of Laws from Indiana University, and Doctor of Science from
Purdue University. Dr. Washington has also toured and studied the educational systems of
Taiwan and seven African countries, sponsored by the Republic of China, and Africa.
Civic and Professional Memberships
Dr. Washington held
membership in several professional organizations, including Kappa Delta Phi, Phi Delta
Kappa, and Alpha Kappa Mu Honorary Society. He served on
boards and advisory councils in and out of the State, including the Board of Directors of
Mississippi Power and Light Company, Entergy Corporation, Blue Cross Blue Shield of
Mississippi, National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education and the
National Commission for Cooperative Education. He has also served as a member of the
Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME), the Advisory Council of the National Urban
League's Black Executive Exchange Program, the Commission on Colleges of the Southern
Association of Colleges and Schools, the President's Council of the State University
Presidents, and the U.S. President's Advisory Council on Historically Black Colleges and
Universities. He was a past president of the Mississippi Teachers Association and held
membership in the Mississippi Association of Educators and the National Education
Association.
Dr. Washington was also a life
member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc. He served two terms as Southern regional Vice
President (1966-1971), and two terms as General President (1972-1976). He presided over
the 70th Anniversary Convention of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity in Liberia, Africa in 1975.
Additionally, he was a charter member of Beta Gamma Boule' of Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity.
Honors and Awards
Dr. Washington has received numerous
honors and awards during his long and illustrious career. Among them, he has received the
Silver Beaver Award from Boy Scouts of America, the Distinguished Service Award and
Distinguished Alumni Award from Peabody College, the Service to Humanity Award from
Mississippi College, and the State and National 4-H Alumnus Recognition Awards. In 1982,
he was awarded the Outstanding Presidential Cluster Citation by President Ronald Reagan.
He was inducted into the Hall of Fame of the University of Southern Mississippi Alumni
Association; received an Award of Distinction in 1990 from the University of Mississippi;
and received the 1993 George Washington Carver Public Service Hall of Fame Award from
Tuskegee University. Buildings are named in his honor on the campuses of Alcorn State
University, Tougaloo College, University of Southern Mississippi and Hinds Community
College ( formerly Utica Junior College).
Dr. Washington was named among Ebony
Magazine's 100 Most Influential Black Americans in 1974, 1975 and 1976. He was named by
the Jackson Daily News panel as one of the twelve most influential Mississippians during
the decade of the 70's. Dr. Washington hosted President George W. Bush as keynote speaker
for Alcorn's 118th commencement exercises in 1989. He received the Man of the Year Award,
the Southern Region Outstanding Achievement Award, the Distinguished Educator's Award, the
Distinguished Service Award, and the Southern Region Leadership Award from Alpha Phi Alpha
Fraternity. He was also selected as Man of the Year in Education in 1981 by Total Living
for Fifty Plus.