Dorothy Burnham


Dorothy Burnham is an American civil rights activist, educator and supercentenarian. She is the widow of activist and journalist Louis E. Burnham.

Early life and career

Burnham was born on March 22, 1915, in Brooklyn, to Barbadian immigrants Aletha Dowridge and Frederick Challenor. Her sister was Elise Challenor Rollock, one of New York's earliest black school principals. She attended Girls' High School, then Brooklyn College, from 1932 to 1936 or 1937, graduating with a bachelor's microbiology degree. She planned to become a doctor, but practiced activism due to a lack of financial stability, which she was encouraged to do by Jessie Campbell, a professor of Burnham. While attending Brooklyn College, she was a member of the Southern Negro Youth Congress, which is how she met Louis E. Burnham; they married in 1941 and moved to Birmingham, Alabama for SNYC activities. In 1936, she joined the Communist Party USA, with encouragement from Claudia Jones. As a member, she encouraged Mildred McAdory to join.
After her husband's death in 1960, she was an active leader in the Sisters Against South African Apartheid, Genes and Gender, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and the national organization Women for Racial and Economic Equality. She served on the board of the cultural journal Freedomways and wrote for it.
As an educator, she began working for Empire State University in 1977, later becoming Professor Emeritus. She taught at Hostos Community College and later taught biology and related subjects at City University of New York, as well as working at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. In 2023, Empire State created the Dorothy Burnham scholarship, named for her.

Personal life

With her husband, Louis, Burnham had four children: Claudia, Margaret, Linda, and Charles. Her 110th birthday was celebrated in the Loring–Greenough House. She is part of the New England Centenarian Study and is its oldest member. In her later years, she spent much time travelling, including annual summer vacations in Africa for many years. She also owns a summer home in Martha's Vineyard.