Donnis Hazel Thompson (1933-2009)

September 16, 2017 
/ Contributed By: Daphne Barbee-Wooten

Donnis Thompson

Donnis Thompson

Image courtesy University of Hawai'i

Dr. Donnis Hazel Thompson was an athlete, coach, University of Hawaii Women’s Athletic Director, State of Hawaii Department of Education school superintendent, Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission chair in Hawaii, and champion for Title IX women’s athletics in Hawaii. Thompson was born in Chicago, Illinois, on April 1, 1933. She attended public schools in Chicago and excelled in track and field. In 1953, she became the national shotput champion in a competition in San Antonio, Texas. Thompson obtained her bachelor’s degree from George Williams College in Williams Bay, Wisconsin, in 1955. She was later a track and field athlete for the Chicago Comets.

In 1961, Thompson moved to Hawaii and served as the first coach of the women’s track and field program at the University of Hawaii. When she accepted the job, she became one of the first African Americans to serve as a coach for women in a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I institution. In 1967, she obtained her Ph.D. in physical education at Northern Colorado University and returned to Hawaii.

In 1973, Thompson became interim Women’s Athletic Director at the University of Hawaii and assumed the permanent post in 1976, becoming the first full-time Women’s Athletic Director at that institution. Through her efforts, the University of Hawaii expanded its athletic programs for women to include women’s volleyball, basketball, softball, soccer, and swimming. She was instrumental in getting women athletic scholarships and ensuring that Title IX of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which mandated equal financing of women’s and men’s sports in higher education, was implemented.

Thompson increased the visibility of women in sports at the University of Hawaii, bringing the school a national reputation for the first time. She hired volleyball coach Dave Shoji, who led the University of Hawaii women’s volleyball team to its highest national honors. She authored several books on track and field, including Modern Track & Field for Women (1973) and Physical Activities Handbook for Women (1974).

In 1981, Thompson was named administrator of the World Games in Mexico City, Mexico. That same year, she became the state superintendent of the Hawaii Department of Education, serving as the first African American woman in that post. While superintendent, she implemented an after-care program for children. She left her position in 1984.

In 1989, Thompson became the chairperson for the Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission when the birthday of the slain civil rights leader became a state holiday that same year. Thompson led the commission, which organized the subsequent annual holiday festivities with parades, rallies, and educational events. She received the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Outstanding Service Award in 1991 for her accomplishments.

On April 5, 1981, the State of Hawaii celebrated Dr. Donnis Thompson Day in recognition of her contributions to women’s athletics and Hawaii. Thompson was inducted into the Sports Circle of Honor in 1988, the University of Hawaii Circle of Honor in 2000, and the Hawaii Sports Hall of Honor in 2007. She received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators the following year. In 2007, Dr. Donnis Thompson was recognized for her work in promoting Women’s History Month by the Hawaii State Commission on the Status of Women. A statue of Thompson was erected on October 28, 2007, in the University of Hawaii’s Stan Sheriff Sports Auditorium.

Dr. Donnis Thompson died in Honolulu, Hawaii on January 2, 2009. She was 75. An invitational golf tournament for women played annually is named after Dr. Donnis Thompson.

Author Profile

Attorney Daphne Barbee-Wooten received her Juris Doctor from the University of Washington in 1979. In addition to her J.D., she has a Certificate in International Law from the Peace Palace, 1983 The Hague Netherlands and has a B.A. Degree in Philosophy from the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

In 2015 she received the Lifetime Achievement Award from Hawaii NAACP along with her husband. In 2016 she received the civil rights attorney of the year award from Sisters Empowering Hawai’i. She was interviewed and featured in the History Makers , 2019. She is a volunteer with the African American film festival at the Honolulu Art Museum. She is a former President of the African American Lawyers Association of Hawai’i and a member of the National Bar Association, Hawai’i State Bar Association. She is a former EEOC Trial Attorney, Board of Bar Examiners (1993 – 2011) U.S. Commission on Civil Rights-Hawaii Advisory (2007-2009), and Hawai’i Civil Rights Commission, Commissioner (1989 – 1995). She is the Chairperson for the Hawaii State Board of Registration on Oahu.

She is a published author and videographer. Her writing publications include: Sisters Across Oceans, (Pacific Raven Press 2021) Justice For All, Selected Writings of Lloyd A. Barbee ( Wisconsin Historical Press 2017), African American Attorneys in Hawai’i, Pacific Raven Press updated in 2020, They Followed the Trade Winds: African Americans in Hawai’i, UH Press 2004, The Politics of Change: Law and African Americans in Twentieth-Century Hawaii. Hawaii Bar Journal, The Lawgiver: George Marion Johnson, J.D., LLD, (February 2005); Essence Magazine, African Americans in Hawai’i, (April 1994), Hawai’i Bar Journal, Hawaii’s First Black Lawyer (February 2004), Hawaii Civil Rights Commission” August 1993, “Spreading the Aloha of Civil Rights”, Hawai’i Bar Journal, November 1999, Go Girl, A Black Woman’s Guide to Travel and Adventure, 1999, contributing writer “Nanny Town, Jamaica”. She writes articles for Blackpast.org. Her poetry is found in “I Can’t Breathe”, A poetic anthology of social justice, edited by Christopher Okemwa, Kistrech Theatre International (2021), La’ila’i. Anthology of the Women’s center Reading Series, University of Hawaii Women’s Center (1996) and has performed her poetry in many venues.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Barbee-Wooten, D. (2017, September 16). Donnis Hazel Thompson (1933-2009). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/thompson-donnis-hazel-1933-2009/

Source of the Author's Information:

“Girls’ Track Coach in Hawaii,” Ebony, March 1963; “Dr. Donnis Thompson,” Hawaii Sports Hall of Fame, 2010, http://www.hawaiisportshalloffame.com/wp/; Dr. Donnis Thompson, interview with Daphne Barbee-Wooten, Honolulu, Hawaii, March 15, 2007.

Further Reading