Winifred Latimer Norman (October 7, 1914 – February 4, 2014) was an American social worker, active in efforts to preserve her grandfather Lewis Howard Latimer's legacy in Flushing, Queens.
Early life
Winifred Latimer Norman was born in Flushing, the daughter of Gerald Fitzherbert Norman and Jeanette Latimer Norman. Her father was a teacher. Her grandfather was inventor and poet Lewis Howard Latimer.[1][2] Her great-grandfather George Latimer escaped slavery in Virginia and was active in the abolition movement in Massachusetts.[3] She graduated from Flushing High School, and from Hunter College, where she was one of only 15 black graduates in 1935.[4] She earned a master's degree at New York University.[5]
Career
Norman was a social worker by profession, and lived in New York City. She represented the Latimer family at various events and commemorations throughout her life.[6] She and her brother Gerald[7] helped to lead the effort to preserve the Lewis H. Latimer House in Flushing;[8][9] their grandfather's home, where they played as children,[10] is now a museum on the National Register of Historic Places.[11] She and her brother were honored by the Duquesne Light Company in 1989, for their work in bringing Latimer's story to a new generation.[12] She co-wrote a middle-grades book about her grandfather,[13]Lewis Latimer: Scientist (1994, with Lily Patterson, foreword by Coretta Scott King).[14][15]
^Passe-Rodriguez, Djenny (March 2, 2009). "Delta Sigma Theta hosts week of events at Columbia, Barnard". New York Amsterdam News. p. 31 – via ProQuest.