Dorthy Johnson (1945- )

September 05, 2008 
/ Contributed By: Robert Lee Johnson

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Dorthy Johnson on stage in gown

Image courtesy Dorthy Johnson|

Born in Pocatello, Idaho, on May 9, 1945, Dorthy (spelled without the second “o”) L. Johnson, became a semi-finalist in the 1964 Miss USA pageant after winning the title of “Miss Idaho.” The nineteen year-old was not the first African American to compete in The Miss USA pageant. That distinction goes to Corinne Huff who in 1960 was the alternate for Miss Ohio.  Johnson was the first semi-finalist and the first African American beauty queen to represent the state of Idaho. At the time of her selection the United States was embroiled in racial tension.  Just one month before, the 1964 Civil Rights Act had just been signed and shortly afterwards three civil rights workers were murdered in Mississippi. Tens of thousands of blacks in the South had had yet to win the right to vote.  Thus, Johnson’s remarkable achievement inspired one Time Magazine reporter to dub her “a pretty paradox.”

Painfully shy, Johnson worked as a telephone operator while a student in elementary education at Idaho State University in Pocatello. The youngest of three boys and three girls, she grew up in a well respected and close knit family.  Her parents, Pompie and Nellie Johnson were founding members of Pocatello’s oldest black church, Bethel Baptist.  Pompie had migrated to Pocatello from Georgia and worked as head janitor for the Union Pacific Railroad while Nellie was a homemaker.

Nellie suggested Dorthy enter the pageant to overcome her shyness.  But when the lovely co-ed won the title of “Miss. Idaho,” her father initially refused to allow her to travel to Miami Beach, Florida.  The twelve day pageant had been held there every year since 1952.  Pompie, however, did not want his sheltered daughter exposed to the indignities of Southern racism.  Yet Dorthy faced indignities at home in Pocatello.  Every year the Miss Idaho winners received clothes and airfare from the state or local businesses.  Dorthy received nothing. Recognizing that his daughter would face challenges because of her race in Idaho and across the nation, and with lobbying from Nellie, Pompie relented and surprised his daughter with four perfectly fitting outfits to wear while she competed in Miami.

Treated well in Miami, Dorthy was shocked to learn that the press did not follow the other contestants as they did her.  And she was amused by whites who seemed surprised to find out she spoke fluent English and was not a foreigner.

Dorothy later became an award winning educator. She was a Los Angeles Reading Association’s Teacher of the Year in 1992, listed in Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers and nominated for the Disney Teacher of the Year Award in 2002. Dorthy Johnson has one daughter and is a new grandmother. She and her husband, Robert LeVels, reside in Long Beach, California.

Dorothy Johnson LeVels died in Downey, California on April 13, 2017. She was 71.

Author Profile

Robert V. Ward Jr., Dean of the Southern New England School of Law in North Dartmouth, Massachusetts, since July 1999, has been involved in legal education since September, 1978. Professor Ward who holds a B.S. from Northeastern University and a J.D. from Suffolk University School of Law, both in Boston. In 1982 he joined the faculty at New England School of Law where he taught Evidence, Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Prisoner’s Rights, and seminars on Race and the Law and Anatomy of a Homicide.. Professor Ward also served as the Director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Enrichment program, an academic achievement program designed to increase the number of people of color practicing law. He has been a visiting professor at Northeastern University College of Law and at the University of Idaho College of Law and an adjunct faculty member at Suffolk University School of Law.

Presently, Dean Ward co-chairs the Massachusetts’ Trial Courts, Access and Fairness Advisory Board. In January of 2001 he was appointed to serve as a Trustee for the Massachusetts Bar Foundation which distributes funds to agencies within the Commonwealth that provide legal services to the needy. In the past he has served on the Executive Committee of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) Section on Academic Support Programs and is currently a member of the American Academy for Judicial Education. Professor Ward formerly served on the Judicial Nominating Council, which assists in the selection of judges, and served as Chairperson of the Massachusetts Victim and Witness Assistance Board and as Chief of the Victim Compensation and Assistance Division of the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office. He was an Assistant District Attorney for Suffolk County, Massachusetts from 1979 to 1982 and a special Assistant District Attorney there from 1987 to 1988.

Dean Ward’s publications include: "Consensual Searches, The Fairytale That Became A Nightmare: Fargo Lessons Concerning Police Initiated Encounters," Touro Law Review 15:2 (Winter 1999); Review of Privilege Revealed, by Stephanie M. Wildman With Contributions By Margalynne Armstrong, Adrienne D. Davis and Trina Grillo, Cleveland State Law Review 45:2 (1997); and "Race Relations and Conflicts in the United States Hate Crimes," Gonzaga Law Review 32:3 (1996/97). He has also published several articles in professional journals, most recently, "Consensual Searches," 36 Howard Law Journal. Dean Ward is a frequent contributor to the editorial pages of the Boston Globe and the Boston Herald and has recently been appointed to the Editorial Board of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Johnson, R. (2008, September 05). Dorthy Johnson (1945- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/johnson-dorthy-1945/

Source of the Author's Information:

“A Pretty Paradox,”, Time Magazine, (July, 1964); “Pretty Coed Awaits Universe Pageant,” Los Angeles Sentinel, July 16, 1964, “In the Finals,“ Miami Herald, July 29, 1964.

Further Reading