Archives Mark Acquisition Of Eva Noles Collection

Release Date: September 12, 2005 This content is archived.

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Eva Noles, the first black nurse to be trained in Buffalo, will be honored by the UB Archives.

BUFFALO, N.Y. -- The University at Buffalo Library Archives recently acquired the papers of Eva M. Noles, R.N., already a historic figure in 1939 when she became the first black nurse to be trained in Buffalo.

Noles went on to become a distinguished educator, a nationally recognized figure in health care, a promoter of civil rights and education for minority women and the founder of the New York State Nurse Week.

In recognition of her accomplishments on behalf of nursing, education, minority women and the Western New York community, the University Archives will host a reception in Noles' honor from 3:30-5 p.m. Sept. 21 in the Special Collections Research Room, 420 Capen Hall on UB's North (Amherst) Campus. It will be free and open to the public.

The reception and accompanying exhibition of selected material from the Noles collection, "Eva M. Noles: African American Trailblazer," also in the Research Room, will be held in connection with 2005 Gender Week celebration sponsored by the UB Institute for Research and Education on Women and Gender.

John Edens, curator of the UB Archives, said, "The reception marks the archives' acquisition of Eva Noles papers, of course, and the exhibition of the materials in her collection, but we want to honor Eva Noles as well and give the public an opportunity to meet and speak with her."

The reception will feature presentations by Peggy Brooks-Bertram, Ph.D., and Barbara Nevergold, Ph.D., directors of UB's Uncrowned Queens Institute for Research and Education on Women, Inc., and authors of "Uncrowned Queens: African American Women Community Builders of Western New York," Vols. I and II.

The institute includes in its mission the collection and dissemination of the individual and collective histories of African-American women and women's organizations. In 2002, Noles received the

institute's Culture Keepers Award for outstanding contributions to African-American culture in Western New York.

Noles, former director of nursing at Roswell Park Cancer Institute, serves on the New York State Board of Nursing and the board of the New York State Nurses Association (District One). She has been an active member of the American Nurses Association (ANA) and many of its national committees, as well.

She served on the board of trustees of The Buffalo General Hospital, chaired the governing board of the hospital's Community Mental Health Center, and was a longtime member of the board of directors of the Greater Buffalo Chapter of the American Red Cross.

The Medical Personnel Pool, with which she worked for years, established a biennial five-year scholarship in Eva Noles' name, which is presented by the New York State Nurses Association to an outstanding senior minority nursing student in Western New York.

Noles graduated from the Edward J. Meyer Memorial Hospital School of Nursing in 1940. She received a bachelor's degree in nursing and master's degree in education from UB.

She is the author of "Black History: A Different Approach -- A Compilation" (Buffalo, N.Y. Noles Publishing, 1988); "Buffalo's Blacks: Talking Proud" (Buffalo, N.Y. Noles Publishing, 1986),and "Six Decades of Nursing at Roswell Park, 1914-1974" (Buffalo, Roswell Park, 1975).

In 1986 she received the William Wells Brown Award from the Afro American Historical Association of the Niagara Frontier for her "notable contributions to the preservation and popularization of regional Afro-American history."

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