Violet King Henry

Violet Pauline King Henry (October 18, 1929 – March 30, 1982) was a Canadian lawyer.

King was the first Black woman lawyer in Canada, the first Black person to graduate law in Alberta and the first Black person to be admitted to the Alberta Bar. She was also the first woman named to a senior management position with the American national YMCA.

Family
King's father John and his extended family moved to Amber Valley, Alberta in 1911, as part of a group of African American farmers migrating from Oklahoma to Alberta, both as part of the Great Migration and to avoid racist laws. They settled in Keystone, Alberta (now Breton, Alberta) southwest of Edmonton. They came to Canada as part of a Canadian government campaign to entice Southern US farmers to the Canadian Prairies, although Clifford Sifton's plan had expected white settlers.

King's parents, John and Stella, moved to Calgary in 1919, where her father worked as a porter and her mother worked as a seamstress. Many African Americans, including her father, worked as porters in Canada. Both of her parents were considered important members of the Calgary community of Black persons. When she graduated, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, a key player in the civil rights movement, gave significant attention to her achievements and both the union's president and vice president travelled from New York and Detroit to make a presentation to her in Calgary. She was also treasurer of the Calgary Brotherhood Council.

Early life
King studied at Crescent Heights High School, where she was president of the Girls Association in grade 12 and had her yearbook captioned with her unusual intention to study criminal law. She started at the University of Alberta in 1948, joining the feminist Blue Stocking Club (modelled after the Blue Stockings Society), serving as Vice-President of the Students Union and the representative of the Students’ Union to the National Federation of Canadian University Students. She became class historian for her final year and was the Alberta representative to the International Student Services Conference in Hamilton in 1952. To finance her studies, she taught piano. An active student, King was one of just four students to receive an Executive "A" gold ring at Colour Night, the university's annual celebration of student contributions to the university – the other three students were future premier Peter Lougheed, Ivan Head (future advisor to Pierre Trudeau), and lawyer Garth Fryett.

Law school
King graduated with her law degree at the University of Alberta in 1953 and was admitted to the Alberta bar in 1954. At the time, these accomplishments were reported prominently by newspapers, including The Calgary Herald, The Albertan, and The Edmonton Journal. When King started her law degree, there were just three women in a class of 142. King’s legal achievements were highly recognized as significantly historic in Canadian law.

King was the first Black woman lawyer in Canada, the first Black person to graduate law in Alberta and the first Black person to be admitted to the Alberta Bar.

Legal practice
King practiced criminal law in Calgary, articling with E.J. McCormick. Though, King did more than just article with E.J McCormick, as through the great efforts of her own, King worked on criminal cases, being assigned five murder cases, and represented clients in domestic violence. Successfully, she appealed an adjournment for a client she represented. King also notably worked on estate law cases. King dedicated many years to being a lawyer, and habitually spoke about racial, gender, and inter-religious relations. She later moved to Ottawa, around 1956, to join the federal civil service in a senior administrative role at Citizenship and Immigration Canada, where she was promoted twice. She served during the time that Ellen Fairclough was named Canada's first woman member of cabinet and Minister of Immigration. By 1962, the Department had taken major steps to eliminate racism and respect the new Bill of Rights.

YMCA executive roles
In 1963, King moved to the United States, working in executive roles for the YW/YMCA in Newark, New Jersey and Chicago, Illinois, gaining prominence for helping African Americans find work. In 1965, King married Godfrey C. Henry, a Trinidadian-American and graduate of Columbia University's Graduate School of Political Science, and they lived in Newark, New Jersey. In 1966 King-Henry gave birth to her only child, daughter Jo-Anne Henry. In 1976, she was appointed Executive Director of the national Council of YMCA’s Organizational Development Group, becoming the first woman named to a senior management position with the American national YMCA.

King was 52 years old when she died of cancer in New York City in 1982.

Legacy
King was featured in the documentary, Secret Alberta: The Former Life of Amber Valley by filmmaker Cheryl Foggo in 2017; King was a bridesmaid at Foggo's mother's wedding. Political scientist Malinda Smith featured King in a research project, funded by the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, to highlight the achievements of women in Canadian black history through a series of brief videos and thereby "make the hidden visible".

In 2021, the Federal Building Plaza located in Alberta was officially renamed the Violet King Henry Plaza,  to recollect King’s Canadian legacy and activism in dismantling systemic, racial and gender barriers. Heritage Calgary and the UCalgary Black Law Students' Association presented a plaque recognizing the former residence of the King family to the residence's owner Angela Pucci. In honor of King's contributions to Canadian law and Black education in Canada, the University of Alberta in 2022 created a $20,000 scholarship named after her that would be available to Black students studying at the university's faculty of law.

King is remembered for combatting oppression in society and in the workplace for people of colour throughout her career and during her speech at the Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Banquet. She accomplished an impressive number of achievements that were deemed unreachable for Black women.