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Deaths

Edith Jones

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Dr. Edith Irby Jones, the first black student to enroll at an all-white medical school in the South and later the first female president of the National Medical Association, has died. She was 91.

Jones’ daughter Myra Jones Romain said her mother died Monday in Houston of natural causes.

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, which Jones integrated in 1948, also announced her death in a post on its website Tuesday.

In addition to being the first black student at UAMS, Jones also was the first black female resident at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston after receiving her medical degree from Arkansas in 1952.

Jones was born on Dec. 23, 1927 in Mayflower, Arkansas, to Robert and Mattie Jones, a sharecropper and a domestic worker. In a transcribed interview with the University of Houston Center for Public History, Jones said that after her older sister died in the 1930s from typhoid fever, Jones decided to pursue medicine.

She enrolled in Knoxville College at 16 and graduated in 1948. After scoring exceptionally on aptitude tests, she was accepted to multiple medical schools. She chose University of Arkansas’ medical school, Romain said, because tuition was low and because it was close to her mother. The decision wasn’t out of a desire to integrate a previously all-white institution, her daughter said.

“I was so proud. I was so proud that I was in medical school that absolutely nothing else mattered,” Jones said in the interview with the University of Houston.

According to UAMS, the school’s board of trustees voted to increase the class size by one that year so no one could claim Jones had taken a spot from a white applicant.

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