Ada Kelly Whitney is featured in a new mural in Windsor. Here's how she made history - Action News
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Ada Kelly Whitney is featured in a new mural in Windsor. Here's how she made history

If you check out Windsor's McDougall Street Corridor, you'll notice three new murals commemorating Black history that were recently unveiled.One of the individuals highlighted is Ada Kelly Whitney, known for being the first Black woman hired by an Ontario public school board.

Whitney was the first Black woman employed by an Ontario public school board, historical society says

Who was Ada Kelly Whitney?

1 year ago
Duration 2:08
Irene Moore Davis tells us about the life of Ada Kelly Whitney, and why the Windsor community should know her name.

If you check out Windsor's McDougall Street Corridor, you'll notice three new murals commemorating Black history that were recently unveiled.

One of the individuals highlighted is Ada Kelly Whitney, known for being the first Black woman hired by an Ontario public school board, according to the Essex County Black Historical Research Society.

"I'm so proud of her," expressed the group's president Irene Moore Davis, who also happens to be a descendent of Whitney's. Davis' grandmother and Whitney were first cousins.

"My whole family is so proud of her."

Born in 1893 in Windsor to Black Canadians from the McDougall Street Corridor community, Davis explained that Whitney was an excellent student whose former principal recommended her to the Windsor Board of Education when it was in search of teachers in 1913.

The board hired her, and she proceeded to teach at the Mercer Street School, instilling great pride in her students, Davis said,many of whom grew up in her neighbourhood and had not been taught by someone who looked like them.

"She was just a really great role model," Davis added.

Her life later took her to Toronto, and New York but her lasting legacy in Windsor remains.

"Of course, when we talk about Ada Kelly Whitney as the first Black woman hired by an Ontario Public School board, we're in no way negating the incredible contributions of the many Black teachers who preceded her, who were not working for public school boards but were working for segregated schools, privately funded schools, missionary schools, and so on," Davis added.

"She was working within a tradition of great Black educators in this region and this province and and really looked up to those role models herself."