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About The skanner. (Portland, Or.) 1975-2014 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 2012)
Black History FROM THE ARCHIVES v L OST N EIGHBORHOODS Thressia Colbert: 100 Years of Helping Youth By Helen Silvis Of The Skanner News Originally published Dec. 12, 2011 S he was born in 1911. That’s the same year as Gone with the Wind star But- terfly McQueen, trumpet great Roy “Little Jazz” Eldridge, and Negro League baseball star Josh Gibson. Those famous folks are long gone now, but at 100 years of age Thressia Del Colbert is still going strong. “I consider her like the glue that holds our family together,” says her nephew Willie John Kelly, who is 76. “She helped our whole family. Everything she did was posi- tive.” Born Nov. 28, 2011 in Linden, Texas, Colbert was the oldest child of Augusta and Willie Osborne Walton: farmers who grew and sold cantaloupes, tomatoes, okra, cucumbers, peppers and watermelon on 160 acres of land bought in 1898 and still owned by the family. With chickens and cattle pro- At 100 years of age Thressia Colbert is sharp as a tack. She remembers Bonnie and and Clyde, the Depression and the Vanport flood of 1948. Many Portlanders remember Colbert as the person who helped them get their first job Ms. Colbert’s relatives and friends gath- ered at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Saturday Dec. 3, to celebrate her amazing life, and testify that “Aunt Stell” has inspired four generations of young people to work hard and achieve. For more about your neigh- borhood go online to www.TheSkanner.com viding milk and meat, the family was self-sufficient in food. “We had the garden and we had every- thing we needed,” Colbert says. “At that time there were not many cars. The only car you saw was the mailman. You saw horses, mules and donkeys.” When Colbert was just 8 years old, her mother died of an undiagnosed illness. “I had a brother and two sisters, and when my mother passed I had to look after that lit- tle crew,” she says. Col- bert’s grandmother, Lila Wilkins, worked for a well- to-do family who lived at 2220 Grand Ave., Dallas. She remembers the address because she was the one in the family who wrote the letters. Her grandmother often sent care packages to help the family. “We were some of the best-dressed little kids in that town,” she says. In 1935, Colbert went to Houston and worked as a janitor for Sears Roebuck so that she could attend Hous- ton College. That’s where she met her husband, Andrew Colbert, a football player. Colbert says she was astounded by how much the other students ate. “I never knew people to eat like this.” Thressia Del Colbert See THRESSIA page 10 February 22, 2012 The Portland and Seattle Skanner v BLACK HISTORY EDITION v Page 9