Melva Lorinda Price (November 14, 1902 – April 10, 1996) was an American educator and activist based in New York City. She taught Latin and other subjects for over thirty years in the New York public schools, and was active in Harlem with the YWCA, Alpha Kappa Alpha, the Hunter College Alumni Club, and other organizations.
Early life
Melva Lorinda Price was born in North Carolina, the daughter of William J. Price and Josie (or Jessie) A. Price. The family moved to New York City when Melva Price was a little child, part of the Great Migration. At age 13, she made national news for her academic achievements in a racially-integrated and co-educational school.[1][2] She graduated from Bushwick High School in Brooklyn in 1920,[3][4] and graduated from Hunter College in 1924.[5] She was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, won the Classics gold medal for excellence in Latin and Greek,[4][5] and was an active member of Alpha Kappa Alpha.[6][7][8]
Away from the classroom, Price was close to many civil rights activists and other noted figures of the Harlem Renaissance. She worked with Thyra J. Edwards on the Negro People's Committee to Aid Spanish Refugees, and visited Edwards in Mexico City.[16] She was president of the Residential Council of the Emma Ransom House at the YWCA in the 1920s.[17] In 1937, she volunteered with an outreach team of black health and social workers in the Mississippi Delta.[18] In 1942, she served on the Harlem Interracial Platform Committee with Adam Clayton Powell Sr., Myra Adele Logan, Lester Granger, and others.[19] In 1943, she was one of the charter members of the Hunter College Alumni Club.[20]