Margaret Lawrence ’36, Who Was Rejected From Cornell’s Medical School Because She Was Black, Dies at 105 – Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

When Margaret Lawrence 36 arrived in Ithaca in 1932, she was the only black student in her class. Denied on-campus housing due to her race, the future psychoanalyst and pediatrician once slept in an attic, working as a live-in maid to help pay for her Cornell degree.

Lawrence whose name was Margaret Cornelia Morgan at the time applied in her senior year to the medical school to continue her education at Cornell, but was denied, since twenty-five years ago there was a Negro man admitted, a dean explained, and it didnt work out. That student had died from tuberculosis.

The Cornell Daily Sun June 12, 1936

Of this roster of graduates published in 1936, Margaret Lawrence 36 was the only black student.

Columbia University did accept Lawrence, propelling the alumna to eventually direct the Therapeutic Developmental Nursery at Harlem Hospital and becoming chief of the Developmental Psychiatry Service for Infants and Children for 21 years.

When Lawrence who would be known for her empathy for children patients, according to The New York Times was in medical school, she continually faced the compounded difficulty of sexism and racism as one of 10 women, and the only black woman in her class.

At Cornell, Lawrence was a skilled archer, scoring in the top eight and snagging a spot on the archery team, according to archived editions of The Sun.

She would chronicle these challenges in a book titled Balm in Gilead: Journey of a Healer, written by her daughter, Prof. Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot, sociology, Harvard University. In one recollection, Lawrence described how when she turned 21 and went to register to vote, she was asked to take a literacy test.

The Cornell Daily Sun on May 22, 1934

During her time at Cornell, Lawrence was involved in archery, repeatedly scoring among the top.

Lawrences story resonated with former Cornell University President Frank H. T. Rhodes, who reportedly heard her struggles and penned a short apology letter for the discrimination in 2008.

He wrote her a short letter of sincere and serious apology for the assaults ofdiscrimination and racism she had suffered, Lawrence-Lightfoot said.

According to The New York Times, Lawrence-Lightfood said that her mother appreciated the respectful and heartfelt apology.

Lawrence died on Wednesday in Boston at an assisted living center at the age of 105.

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Margaret Lawrence '36, Who Was Rejected From Cornell's Medical School Because She Was Black, Dies at 105 - Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

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