Take a close look at Azie Taylor
Morton’s name. Perhaps, you recognize it. For a span of 20 years between the
late 1970s and close to 2000, money in United States bore her signature.
Morton remains the only African American to ever serve as the Treasurer of the United States. President Jimmy Carter appointed her to the position.
Taylor was
born in Dale, Texas, on Feb. 1, 1936. Her hometown offered few
opportunities, but she was not deterred. Her mother was deaf and mute, and
Taylor attended the Texas School for the Blind, Deaf and Orphan even though was
not blind or deaf. She enrolled at the school because there was not one for
African American teenagers. She graduated at the top of the class when she was
16.
In 1952 Taylor enrolled at
Hutson-Tillotson University which was an all-Black school in Austin, Texas.
After graduation, she attempted to attend graduate school at the University of
Texas but was denied acceptance on the basis of “insufficient
undergraduate courses.”
Taylor taught at a school for
delinquent girls until she was hired as the assistant to the president of Hutson-Tillotson. After working at
the university for a few months, she joined the Texas AFL-CIO as an employee.
President John F. Kennedy invited her to work on the Committee on Equal
Employment Opportunity in 1961.
Taylor’s historic career achievement
came in 1977 when she accepted President Jimmy Carter’s invitation to serve as
the nation’s 36th treasurer. She served for four years.
After her work in Washington, D.C.,
Taylor returned to Texas. In 2003 she suffered a massive stroke at her home and
died the following day. She was a pioneer, a wife and the mother of two
daughters.