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Letter from the Chancellor

History: The University of Arkansas Black Experience

Celebration: The Silas Hunt Legacy Award Event

Profiles of Recipients

Progress Report

Snapshot: University of Arkansas

About the Black Alumni Society

Sources and Thanks

Honoring Royster’s Memory

Nola RoysterNola Royster will be remembered by those on the University of Arkansas campus who knew her as a kind person who smiled easily.

Royster was the longtime director of Career Services at the University of Arkansas until her death in 2001. After earning her doctorate of education in adult education from the U of A in 1993, Royster was appointed in July 1993 as director of the University of Arkansas Career Development Center and adjunct associate professor in the College of Education.

Much of her work was educating students, job development and employer relations, and her research studied the impact of diversity training on corporate, civic, and public sector organizations. She insisted that working with young people was not “work” since it was her passion.

To commemorate Royster’s legacy of helping students, the Nola Holt Royster Suite was dedicated in 2002. The suite is Arkansas Union 607, and used for providing career development services for University of Arkansas students. Several corporations joined forces and contributed more than $10,000 to help fund the Center. Silas Herbert Hunt was born in Ashdown, Ark. His family moved to Oklahoma when Silas was young, but returned to Texarkana, Ark., when he was 14. Hunt took an interest in school, participating in many activities and graduating salutatorian of his class in 1941. He enrolled in Arkansas Agricultural, Mechanical and Normal College – now known as the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff – where his academic ability gained him recognition and financial aid.

Hunt was a veteran of World War II. The service took him away from his studies for 23 months. He was still recovering from wounds sustained during the Battle of the Bulge when he returned to AM&N to complete his degree in 1947.

On Feb. 2, 1948, Silas Hunt became the first black student to attend a major Southern public university in modern times when he was admitted to the University of Arkansas School of Law.

Historians who have written about Hunt state that he was the ideal candidate for breaking the color barrier at the University of Arkansas. His historic journey to Fayetteville was a courageous act, and the records show that he had a strong support network of friends. Early black students who followed him went on to accomplish even greater feats. But none of that diminishes the qualities and strength of character that embodied Hunt as an individual.

Hunt’s presence at the University was brief, sadly; he died from tuberculosis in the spring of 1949. But his presence left a significant legacy of possibility and inspiration to countless other African Americans in Arkansas and across the nation.