Educational administrator Albert Walter Dent was born in Atlanta, Georgia, on September 25, 1904, to Daisy Dent. Information was not available regarding his father. He had two sisters.
Dent graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in accounting from Morehouse College in Atlanta in 1926. He was active in student affairs, and on the basketball team, in the glee club, and orchestra and pledged Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. After graduating, he became a branch office auditor for Atlanta Life and moved to New Orleans.
In 1931, Dent returned to Morehouse College upon request of John Hope, the first Black president of the College to serve as its alumni secretary and director of its endowment campaign. Shortly afterward, Dent married Ernestine Jessie Covington, a Concert pianist from Houston, Texas, and graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and the Juilliard School. The couple had three sons, Thomas Covington Dent, Benjamin Albert Dent, and Walter Jesse Dent.
In 1932, Dent was named superintendent of Dillard University’s Flint-Goodridge Hospital, then one of the nation’s leading hospitals for African Americans. In 1935 Dillard University hired Dent as business manager. Six years later, on May 31, 1941, Dent was elected the third president of Dillard University, a post he held for 28 years. Dent was as efficient in the university’s management as he had been at the hospital. He strengthened the faculty, increased the academic offerings, raised the endowment, and established a college nursing program. The College of the nursing program was a five-year program that led to a Bachelor of Science degree and was the first nationally accredited college nursing program in Louisiana. Dent also completed Dillard University’s building program, which consisted of renovating and enlarging buildings and constructing new buildings on campus.
In 1948, Dent was elected president of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools for Negroes (now Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools: Commission on Secondary Schools). He was on the National Merit Scholarship Program board and the Committee on Faculty Fellowships of the Ford Fund for the Advancement of Education, and a board member of the American Council of Education.
Dent was active during the 1960s demonstrations for Civil Rights. He participated in the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom that pressured President John F. Kennedy’s administration to initiate an effective federal civil rights bill in Congress.
Dent retired from Dillard University in 1969 after twenty-eight years of service but remained a consultant. After his retirement, Dent continued his pace of involvement with several boards, charities, and civic organizations. That same year, he was honored when Dillard named the new university gymnasium, Dent Hall. In 1973, Dillard dedicated its new health and physical education building to Dent, renaming it Albert Walter Dent Hall.
In addition to receiving the Doctor of Humane Letters from Dillard University in 1977, Dent was also awarded honorary degrees were from Morehouse College, Bishop College, and Tulane University.
On February 13, 1984, Albert Walter Dent, who impacted the health care system and two major Southern academies, died in New Orleans, Louisiana. He was 79.
Otis D. Alexander, Library Director at Saint John Vianney College Seminary & Graduate School in Miami, Florida, has also directed academic and public libraries in the District of Columbia, Indiana, Texas, and Virginia. In addition, he has been a library manager in the Virgin Islands of the United States as well as in the Republic of Liberia. His research has appeared in Public Library Quarterly, Scribner’s Encyclopedia of American Lives, and Virginia Libraries journal. Alexander received the Bachelor of Arts and Master of Science degrees from the University of the District of Columbia and the Master of Library & Information Science degree from Ball State University. He earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree from International University and studied additionally at Harvard Graduate School of Education Leadership for Academic Librarians, Oberlin Conservatory of Music Voice Performance Pedagogy, and Atlanta University School of Library & Information Studies.