Southern Courier, 1967 |
Mrs. Lucinda Thelma Brown Robey (1910-1975) was a local educator, civic leader and civil rights activist. Born in Birmingham, Alabama in 1910, Robey grew up in the Titusville community. After graduating from high school in 1929, Robey became an elementary school teacher in rural Covington County, Alabama while pursuing a degree at the historically black State Teachers College in Montgomery. She left Covington County in 1935 and returned to Birmingham to work as an adult education teacher with the Birmingham Public Schools. In 1941, Robey graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in education from State Teachers College. Robey did graduate work at the George Peabody College in Nashville and Florida State University in Tallahassee. She married fellow educator Bruce B. Robey in 1942.
Robey’s exceptional education career spanned more than four decades, which included experience as a classroom teacher and as a principal. She served as principal of Inglenook Elementary, Dudley School, Forty-Second Street School, and Moore School in Birmingham. In 1956, she was elected “Teacher of the Year” by a panel of leading citizens in Birmingham for her leadership, excellence, and commitment to education. Later, she was selected “Principal of the Year” by the Birmingham Progressive Education Association for the 1967-68 school year.
Jet Magazine, October 1971 |
She exemplified leadership in community organizations, and her affiliations were impressive. Robey was a former chairperson of the black Eighth Avenue YWCA and co-chair of the public relations committee for the Community Chest in Birmingham. She also served as chair of her local delegation to the Alabama State Teacher’s Association, the professional organization for the state’s black teachers, and as a board member of the Birmingham Negro Teachers Association. Robey, a former basileus of the Birmingham chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, also served her sorority as regional marshal and national board member.
Lucinda Robey was a steadfast, active Baptist woman until the end of her life. She succumbed to a heart attack during the meeting of the National Baptist Sunday School and Baptist Training Union Congress in Birmingham in 1975. Upon her death, church leaders, civic leaders, educators and civil rights activists from around the country celebrated her leadership, public service, and commitment to equal rights.