WNMU Looks Back at an Award-Winning Literary Alum
As Black History Month begins, Western New Mexico University recognizes the work of one of its distinguished alums, Anita Scott Coleman (1890-1960). Coleman, who was born in Guaymas, Mexico, grew up on a ranch outside Silver City. Her father came west from Florida as a Buffalo Soldier, a term given to Black men who enlisted to fight Native Americans after the Civil War. Coleman graduated from what was then known as New Mexico Normal School in 1909. She and a classmate were the first African Americans to graduate from the school. Even as a student, Coleman’s literary talent was recognized by her peers. In “The Normalite,” the school newspaper which at that time also served as a de facto yearbook, the editors included a short, tongue-in-cheek poem about each of the graduates. The poem about Coleman reads, “Annie, so good in the literature class / Found out in geometry, it was hard to pass.” Following a short career as a teacher, Coleman went on to publish short...