Betty Jamerson Reed (born 1937) is a researcher, author and retired educator in the United States. She has written about school segregation in North Carolina and educators who challenged discrimination.
She surveyed Rosenwald Schools in southwestern North Carolina for the State Archives Department in 2002.[1] Reed authored The Brevard Rosenwald School; Black Education and Community Building in a Southern Appalachian Town, 1920-1966 in 2004. The book generally received praise from reviewers.[3][4] The Brevard Rosenwald School had also been the subject of her dissertation.[5]
In 2011, she published School Segregation in Western North Carolina, A History, 1860s-1970s.[6] In 2012 she was honored by the American Association of State and Local History for her book.[7] In 2019, Reed published Soldiers in Petticoats.[8] To covers the lives and work of educatorsMartha Berry, Sophia Sawyer, and Emily Prudden.
She also writes poetry,[1] and her work has been included in anthologies.[9] She lives in Transylvania County, North Carolina.[1]
School Segregation in Western North Carolina: A History, 1860s-1970s. McFarland. October 14, 2011. ISBN9780786487080.
The Brevard Rosenwald School: Black Education and Community Building in a Southern Appalachian Town, 1920-1966. McFarland. 5 March 2004. ISBN9780786417438.
Articles
"Sequoyah, the Son of a Virginian”, The Virginia Writers Journal. July 2022.