Eva Beatrice Dykes
Eva Beatrice Dykes was a prominent educator and in 1921 one of the first three black American women to be awarded a PhD.
Early life and education
Dykes was born in Washington, D.C., on August 13, 1893, the daughter of Martha Ann and James Stanley Dykes. She attended M Street High School. She graduated summa cum laudCareer
After her graduation from Radcliffe in 1921, Dykes continued to teach at Dunbar High School until 1929 when she returned to Howard University as a member of the English Faculty. An excellent teacher, Dykes won a number of teaching awards during her 15 years of service at Howard University. Her publications include Readings from Negro Authors for Schools and Colleges co-authored with Lorenzo Dow Turner and Otelia Cromwell and The Negro in English Romantic Thought: Or a Study in Sympathy for the Oppressed. In 1934 Dykes began writing a column in the Seventh-day Adventist periodical Message Magazine, this continued until 1984.In 1920 Dykes joined the Seventh-day Adventist Church, and in 1944 she joined the faculty of the then small and unaccredited Seventh-day Adventist Oakwood College in Huntsville, Alabama, as the Chair of the English Department. She was the first staff member at Oakwood to hold a doctoral qualification and was instrumental in assisting the college to gain accreditation. Dykes retired in 1968 but returned to Oakwood to teach in 1970 and continued until 1975. In 1973 the Oakwood College library was named in her honor and in 1980 she was made a Professor Emerita. In 1975 the General Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church presented Dykes with a Citation of Excellence honouring her for an outstanding contribution to Seventh-day Adventist education. Dykes died in Huntsville on October 29, 1986, at the age of 93.
Publications
Readings from Negro Authors for Schools and Colleges.- ''The Negro in English Romantic Thought: Or a Study in Sympathy for the Oppressed''