Helen Chatfield Black
Helen Black was an American naturalist and conservationist from the Greater Cincinnati area.
Biography
Helen Black was born in 1924 and grew up in Indian Hill area of Cincinnati. After graduating from Vassar College with a degree in English in 1945, she and her husband settled in Indian Hill and committed herself to conservation, having been inspired by an elementary teacher, Louis Brand, at the Lotspeich School and Dr. Emma Lucy Braun, a prominent botanist, ecologist and expert on the forests of the eastern United States.Black was one of the founders of the Cincinnati Nature Center, the nation's largest member-supported nature center, in 1965 and Little Miami Inc. She served as vice president of the CNC from 1967 to 1977, later becoming a teaching volunteer, land steward, and active honor trustee and lands committee member. Black was president of the Ohio chapter of The Nature Conservancy from 1976 to 1978 and board member of the Ohio Environmental Council.
Black was instrumental in the merger that created the Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal in 1983. For 20 years, she was on the board of the Cincinnati Museum of Natural History at Gilbert Avenue advocating the merger between the museum and the Cincinnati Historical Society at Union Terminal. In 1995, she joined the board of directors, serving until 2004, when she was named a lifetime emeritus trustee.
She also worked with other regional conservation groups including: Edge of Appalachia Preserve, Greenacres, Indian Hill Garden Club, Redbird Hollow Association, Cincinnati Wildflower Preservation Society, Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority, and Shelterhouse.