Marione Willene Jackson Herman DURHAM — Marione Willene Jackson - TopicsExpress



          

Marione Willene Jackson Herman DURHAM — Marione Willene Jackson Herman, the oldest of three children of the late Genester Brown Jackson and the late William Arthur Jackson, was born September 30, 1941 in Kings Mountain, North Carolina. Her family relocated to Durham in 1954. She departed this life on March 26, 2014 after a long struggle with breast cancer. Marione was a 1959 honors graduate of Hillside High School. She matriculated at North Carolina College (NCCU), taking a major in French and a minor in Spanish. At NCC she was president of the Pyramid Club and later a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. She was founding president of Pi Delta Phi (French Honor Society). She served as an Exchange student during the summer of 1962, studying Spanish at Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico. She graduated cum laude with the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1963. After attending NDEA Foreign Language Institutes at North Carolina Central, Kansas State Teachers College and West Virginia University, serving as a demonstration teacher in each, she was awarded the Master of Arts degree in French (1972) by NCCU. She did further graduate studies at Atlantic Christian College, UNC-CH, and East Carolina University. She was employed by the Hertford County Board of Education in 1963 where she taught French and Spanish at the R.L. Vann School until 1970. With the advent of integration, she was transferred to the Ahoskie High School where she taught foreign languages until retirement. Marione began her walk with the Lord at Mt. Olive Baptist Church in Kings Mountain. She later moved her membership to White Rock Baptist Church in Durham and then to New Ahoskie Baptist Church. Upon her move back to Durham, she reinstated her membership with White Rock where she was an active member with several ministries until her health prevented her participation. Marione was always a “fighter in the army.” She was stricken with poliomyelitis at age seven. Though it left her with a paralyzed left arm, it was not a major difficulty for her. Because of the guidance of a caring professor, she referred to the “handicap as merely an “atypicality” and refused to believe that there was anything she could not accomplish. She was married in 1964 to Harry T. Herman who preceded her in death; they were the parents of one son, H. Todd Herman who survives. She is also survived by her grandson, Gabriel Tariq Herman; her devoted former daughter-in-law, Shannon Monroe Herman; her loving brother and sister, Walter A. Jackson and Sue J. Jarmon (Mack). Other survivors include her nieces and nephews (whom she called her “other grandchildren”) Marcus A. Jackson (Berthelia), David A. Jarmon (Vanessa), Dennis A. Jarmon (Venita), and Delbert L. Jarmon (Carmen); 11 great-nieces and nephews; Susie Davis Jackson; Alisa A. Jarmon; a host of cousins; her White Rock Baptist Church family; her sisters of the Ahoskie Alumnae, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. and her Hillside High School 1959 classmates.
Posted on: Fri, 28 Mar 2014 15:13:17 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015