News From Terre Haute, Indiana

Black History Month

February 15, 2007

Black History Month: Mother Bettie is a TH living legend

TERRE HAUTE — Bettie Eleanor Davis, 85, is a Terre Haute native whose love of young people and interest in sharing the history of her people have made her a local treasure.

Davis, also known as Mother Bettie, is a volunteer and activist who has been researching and telling the history of black people in Terre Haute for more than a decade.

“I should have done this sooner – I was around all those people back then and I didn’t sit down and do a lot of talking to them,” she says now.

Her work garnered her the 2006 Juneteenth Community Service Award in Terre Haute. In April 2006, she was honored with an Indiana National Treasure award during Indiana State University’s annual Human Rights Day celebration.

Davis remembers growing up around South 13th Street when the city was segregated. She says most of her information comes from thinking about “people and things that were in the neighborhood where I was raised.”

Born March 1, 1921, Davis attended the Colored Day Nursery as a child, and Booker T. Washington grade school from 1927 to 1936. She went to Sarah Scott Junior High School and Wiley High School.

“We lived in a shotgun house, with a potbelly stove for heat. We had no electricity,” she says now. Davis says she remembers having chickens “running in the yard.”

Davis had two older sisters and two younger half brothers, she said.

Davis left Terre Haute in 1939 to attend Lyons Township High School in LaGrange, Ill. She graduated in 1942.

After graduating from high school, she worked in Chicago as an index file clerk before returning to Terre Haute. In the 1940s, she worked as a messenger at the Army Depot on Fruitridge Avenue.

Davis was married to the Rev. Willie Eugene Davis for 22 years, she said. The couple had no children.

As a young adult, Davis led two Girl Scout troupes, one at Booker T. Washington School and another at Thompson School.

In the 1980s, Davis said she began taking computer courses at St. Mary-of-the-Woods College. It wasn’t until she was in her 70s that she began researching black history in Terre Haute.

“Younger people really don’t know too much about the way it was back in the 1920s, 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s,” she said recently. “They don’t know about a lot of things invented by black people, because they haven’t been told. There are a lot of things in Terre Haute that they don’t know about.

“Everybody else knows about their history, but some of the young blacks don’t believe or know of things that happened before they were born,” Davis says.

Davis, who belongs to several civic organizations, including the Terre Haute branch of the NAACP and the Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Coalition, says she is working on a book about her life “between the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad tracks and the Wabash River.”

Davis works at the King’s Kids Day Care center as a foster grandparent 20 hours a week. As a member of the Anti-Racism Team of the Sisters of Providence at St. Mary-of-the-Woods and a pivotal participant in the Underground Railroad re-enactment in Terre Haute, Davis is always on the go.

She says her hobbies include exploring the Internet and writing.

“I find a lot of things on the Internet so it kind of keeps me on my toes,” she says.

Continuing to work and learn “keeps me lively,” Davis says. “If I sit down, I’m gone … I haven’t retired from anything.”

Deb McKee can be reached at (812) 231-4254 or deb.mckee@tribstar.com.

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