Estelle L. Stansberry

We look at old photos and wonder whatever happened to those people?  How did they live? Who knows about them?

Estelle Livingston Stansberry was from Philadelphia, a descendant of slaves who worked on the Wye plantation as well as the Nanticoke Indian tribe. Estelle’s father, the Rev. John B. Stansberry, was a prominent African Methodist Episcopal preacher in New York and Pennsylvania who sent her to Princess Anne Academy.

I know about one of them — she was my grandmother, whose graduation picture I discovered … on the University of Maryland Eastern Shore’s website.

After her 1894 graduation from the forerunner of UMES, she became a nurse at Philadelphia’s Douglas hospital, an institution later led by her son, Haldane.

Estelle married Charles King in 1905, and they had seven children, four of whom died young from disease and accidents. The three survivors, John, William and Haldane, inherited Estelle’s love of education. She recognized the transformative power of knowledge and insisted her sons go to college, even though that often seemed impossible for young black men in the 1930s.

Hal King
Haldane King Jr.

John B. King, the eldest, chose education as his career, earned a Ph.D. and became Deputy Superintendent of New York City schools in the 1950s.  John B. King Jr., his son1, is currently New York’s Commissioner of Education, overseeing all public schools and universities.

William “Dolly” King was a prominent athlete, leading Long Island University to national basketball championships in 1939 and 1941. He and Pop Gates became the first blacks to play professional basketball. Dolly King also played professional baseball for the Homestead Grays of the Negro Leagues. 

Haldane King, my father, also attended LIU, but World War II interrupted his education. He volunteered for flight training at Tuskegee and graduated in Class 43-J as one of the first bomber pilots. After the war, Haldane joined New York City’s fire department, becoming one of its first African Americans. He left FDNY when recalled into the Air Force during the Korean War, setting him on a 26-year career path in the military with assignments in Europe, Maine, California and finally, the Pentagon. He retired as a lieutenant colonel. 

I followed in his considerable footsteps as a U.S. Air Force pilot, serving in Vietnam. He and I are honored to be subjects of an exhibit in the Air Force museum. 

My grandmother’s example confirms the impact an education can have on generations that follow. Her children and grandchildren hold degrees from Columbia, Cornell, Harvard, Penn, Yale, Stanford, Howard, Rutgers, UC Santa Barbara, Northwestern, Penn State and Arizona. There are doctors, teachers, business owners and corporate executives who owe their success to the legacy of the remarkable Estelle Stansberry.

— Haldane King Jr. is founder and chief executive officer of a California marketing firm


Editor’s note: Haldane King Jr. was doing genealogical research when he came upon an online photograph of his grandmother, among the earliest graduates of the school that 125 years after its founding is known as the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. Mr. King was invited to share this brief history of Estelle L. Stansberry’s remarkable family.

(1)Since Haldane King Jr. wrote this essay in 2013, his cousin John B. King Jr. went on to become U.S. Secretary of Education in the Obama administration, served as a commencement speaker at UMES and in May 2021 received an honorary degree from Miss Stansberry’s alma mater.

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