Rachel Taylor Milton | |
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| Born | (1901-05-19)May 19, 1901 |
| Died | July 4, 1995(1995-07-04) (aged 94) |
| Education | Hartford Seminary |
| Organization | Urban League ofHartford |
| Awards | Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame inductee |
Rachel Taylor Milton (1901–1995) was an American educator,community activist, and co-founder of theUrban League ofHartford, Connecticut.[1] The firstAfrican American woman to graduate fromHartford Seminary, Milton was inducted into theConnecticut Women's Hall of Fame in 1994.[2]
Milton was born in Hartford on May 19, 1901, to parents John O. and Mary Epps Taylor. She was educated in the city's public schools and at Hartford Seminary. Her professional career began in 1924. She served as executive director ofYMCA chapters inPittsburgh,Omaha,Chicago, andNashville, desegregating the YMCA camps in Pittsburgh and Omaha. Concurrently, she studied at theUniversity of Pittsburgh,Columbia University School of Social Work,University of Chicago,George Williams College, andSwarthmore College. Milton served as associate dean of women atFisk University from 1953 to 1955. In 1958, she served as director of the first Interracial Senior Citizens Center of theChicago Housing Authority.[1][3]
Milton returned to Hartford in 1959, where she worked for the State Bureau for Vocational Rehabilitation and became a community organizer. In 1962, she led a group that organized a community fundraising drive that raised $90,000 to launch aNational Urban League affiliate chapter in Hartford in 1964. She served on its board of directors and as board secretary.[2] The Urban League of Greater Hartford continues to offer community services in the areas of adult education, youth development, community health, workforce development and training, and home ownership and neighborhood improvement.[4] In 1979, Milton chaired the committee that got theUnion Baptist Church listed on theNational Register of Historic Places.[3]
In addition to her Urban League contributions, Milton organized the Junior Council of theNational Council of Negro Women. In 1968, she receivedB'nai B'rith’s Woman of the Year Award.[2] She was a charter member of the Hartford chapter of the National Association of Negro Business and Professional Women's Clubs, the Mayor's Committee on Minority Problems, the Regional Council of theGreater Hartford Community College, the Women's Auxiliary of theHartford Symphony Orchestra, theDelta Sigma Theta sorority, theNAACP, and the Harriet Beecher Stowe Foundation. She received honors from the Alumni Association of the Hartford Seminary Foundation, theConnecticut Historical Society, the West Indian Celebration Committee, and other organizations.[3]
Born Rachel Taylor, she married Charles H. Milton, assistant pastor of Mount Calvary Baptist Church in Hartford. The couple had no issue.[1][2]
Rachel Milton died at a convalescent home inSimsbury, Connecticut, on July 4, 1995, at the age of 94.[1]