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Joyce Elizabeth <I>Burrows</I> Dinkins

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Joyce Elizabeth Burrows Dinkins

Birth
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA
Death
11 Oct 2020 (aged 89)
New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Joyce Elizabeth Dinkins was an American children's rights activist, literacy advocate, civil servant, and wife of former New York City Mayor David Dinkins
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Joyce Dinkins, the former first lady of New York City, died Sunday October 11, 2020 at home, her family said in a statement.
Her husband, David Dinkins, was the city's first — and, to date, only — Black mayor. During his term as mayor from 1990 to 1993, Joyce Dinkins focused her efforts on the city's children, and promoted programs that would improve their literacy as well as access to the arts.
On behalf of the family, Mayor Dinkins' Operations Manager, Lynda Hamilton, released a statement announcing the news:
"Joyce B Dinkins peacefully transitioned from this life, at home in the company of her family, on October 11, 2020. A memorial service will be held sometime after the COVID crisis ends. While our city will miss this incredible human being who personified grace, compassion, and love, her family will strive to honor her legacy," Hamilton said.
The statement also detailed Dinkins' incredible life and legacy:
"Joyce Burrows Dinkins, the youngest of two daughters of Daniel Burrows and Elaine Nelthrop Burrows, was born in 1930. Daniel Burrows was a prominent entrepreneur and political figure in Harlem," the statement reads. "Joyce was raised and educated in Harlem and graduated from George Washington High School. She then attended Howard University in Washington, D.C., where she received a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology in 1953."
~~"As First Lady of New York City, Joyce promoted education, health care, and the arts for children. She served as honorary chair of the Mayor's Task Force on Child Abuse, chairperson of 'The First Day Back to School' a multi-media service campaign, and honorary chairperson of New York City's Children's Week," it continues. "But her primary concern was always increasing the literacy of New York's children."
She was "such a strong and good woman, so dignified in everything she did," said New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who worked in the Dinkins administration. He said she played "a huge role" in her husband's political life.
"Without Joyce Dinkins there wouldn't have been a Dinkins administration. She was an incredible woman and an inspiration to @NYCFirstLady and I. The light she brought into this world will be forever missed. Tonight, the city she served is heartbroken."
~~"Born in NYC, she spent her time as its First Lady with grace & purpose—dedicated to education and a champion for literacy," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on Twitter.
~~The Rev. Al Sharpton also mourned her death.
"She was a quiet but strong committed woman who made us sit up [with] pride," Sharpton wrote on Twitter. "She will be missed and always remembered."
When her husband became mayor, she retired from her job in the State Department of Taxation and Finance, and took up her role as first lady.
Raised in Harlem, she grew up as one of two daughters of Daniel Burrows, a businessman who became involved in Democratic politics and was among the first Black men to serve in the state Assembly. He encouraged his son-in-law to get into politics.
She went to Howard University, where she majored in sociology, became a member of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority and met her future husband, whom she married in 1953.
Dinkins is survived by her husband, two children and two grandchildren.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Whenever former Mayor David Dinkins mentioned his wife, Joyce, he referred to her as his beautiful bride, and she was indeed beautiful and bountiful too. That beauty and bounty now is part of her enduring legacy as she, at 89, joined the ancestors Sunday, Oct. 11 according to an announcement from Governor Cuomo.
"Very sad to learn of the passing of Joyce Dinkins," the governor tweeted. "Born in NYC, she spent her time as its First Lady with grace & purpose—dedicated to education and a champion of literacy."
More specifically, Joyce Burrows Dinkins was born in Harlem where she was raised in a very prominent and influential family. She was the younger of two daughters of Daniel and Elaine Neltrop Burrows, and began developing her educational acumen while a student at George Washington High School and later at Howard University where she received a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology.
A homecoming queen, she graduated from Howard in 1953, the same year she met and married David. From the very start, they were a dauntless duo, her insight matching and enhancing her husband's ambitions. And on occasion her wit was equal to his. A gifted storyteller, David often recounted how lucky Joyce was to marry him and not a competing suitor. "See, if you had married him you would be the wife of a ditch-digger," he boasted. "No," Joyce responded, "If I married him, he would be mayor and you would be the ditch digger."
This was just a portion of the repartee they shared over their long and productive marriage that was never more crowned than when David was elected mayor in 1989, New York City's first and only African American to hold the office. Without missing a beat, Joyce assumed her duties as First Lady, expanding her position as a coordinator of Metropolitan Affairs in the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.
Now she could effectively initiate and promote her educational vision, her dedication to the arts for children and health care. Among the responsibilities she eagerly pursued was as honorary chair of the Mayor's Task Force on Child Abuse, which of course dovetailed productively with devotion to the improvement of literacy for the city's children. As Lynda Hamilton observed in her tribute to Mrs. Dinkins, "In 1990, she established 'Reading is Recreation,' a program that brought public school students to Gracie Mansion which expanded to provide special assistance to additional schools located throughout the five boroughs. In recognition of her love for our city's children, the Joyce B. Dinkins Children's Collection was established at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture over a decade ago. The former First Lady was a member of the board of the New York Urban League, WNET/Channel 13, the Historic House Trust of New York City, Big Sisters, Inc., and the Early Stages Theater program. She was also an honorary member of the Black Health Research Foundation, and a member of the New York Bench and Bar Spouses, Inc."
Through all these endeavors, Joyce continued to embellish her partnership with David, as former Congressman Charles Rangel noted in an interview with Michel Marriott in 1990. "He's never had to consider whether he had the support of Joyce,'' he said ''She is not a politician, but a partner, and a partner has a different role.'' She knew how to fulfill her duties without losing sight of being a mother and taking care of family affairs, Rangel added.
Besides her lifetime membership in the NAACP, she was a member in good standing of Howard University's Alumni Association, and closer to home she had an unwavering commitment to the Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement, dedicating the first green, affordable housing development in the city as the Joyce and David Dinkins Gardens. To that end their union continues to flower.
She was predeceased by her parents and her older sister, Gloria Burrows Sparks. She is survived by her spouse and life partner, David N Dinkins; her children, David N Dinkins, Jr, and Donna Dinkins Hoggard; her daughter-in-law, Paula Bormes, son-in-law, Jay Hoggard; grandchildren Jamal Hoggard and Kalila Hoggard Anderson; grandson-in-law, Francois Anderson; sister-in-law, Joyce Dinkins Belton; and numerous cousins, nieces, nephews, god children and beloved friends.
The Dinkins family thanks everyone for their comforting thoughts, prayers and expressions of sympathy. In lieu of flowers, contributions/donations can be made to: Howard University Scholarship Fund, Joyce B Dinkins Children's Collection at Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and the Calvary Hospital Hospice Care.
Extracted f rom "Beloved First Lady Joyce Dinkins, passes at 89" (Herb Boyd) posted by the New York Amsterdam News on October 14, 2020, 1:24 p.m. | Updated on October 14, 2020, 1:29 p.m.

Thanks to Contributor Loren (45426922) for help with this memorial
Joyce Elizabeth Dinkins was an American children's rights activist, literacy advocate, civil servant, and wife of former New York City Mayor David Dinkins
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Joyce Dinkins, the former first lady of New York City, died Sunday October 11, 2020 at home, her family said in a statement.
Her husband, David Dinkins, was the city's first — and, to date, only — Black mayor. During his term as mayor from 1990 to 1993, Joyce Dinkins focused her efforts on the city's children, and promoted programs that would improve their literacy as well as access to the arts.
On behalf of the family, Mayor Dinkins' Operations Manager, Lynda Hamilton, released a statement announcing the news:
"Joyce B Dinkins peacefully transitioned from this life, at home in the company of her family, on October 11, 2020. A memorial service will be held sometime after the COVID crisis ends. While our city will miss this incredible human being who personified grace, compassion, and love, her family will strive to honor her legacy," Hamilton said.
The statement also detailed Dinkins' incredible life and legacy:
"Joyce Burrows Dinkins, the youngest of two daughters of Daniel Burrows and Elaine Nelthrop Burrows, was born in 1930. Daniel Burrows was a prominent entrepreneur and political figure in Harlem," the statement reads. "Joyce was raised and educated in Harlem and graduated from George Washington High School. She then attended Howard University in Washington, D.C., where she received a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology in 1953."
~~"As First Lady of New York City, Joyce promoted education, health care, and the arts for children. She served as honorary chair of the Mayor's Task Force on Child Abuse, chairperson of 'The First Day Back to School' a multi-media service campaign, and honorary chairperson of New York City's Children's Week," it continues. "But her primary concern was always increasing the literacy of New York's children."
She was "such a strong and good woman, so dignified in everything she did," said New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, who worked in the Dinkins administration. He said she played "a huge role" in her husband's political life.
"Without Joyce Dinkins there wouldn't have been a Dinkins administration. She was an incredible woman and an inspiration to @NYCFirstLady and I. The light she brought into this world will be forever missed. Tonight, the city she served is heartbroken."
~~"Born in NYC, she spent her time as its First Lady with grace & purpose—dedicated to education and a champion for literacy," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on Twitter.
~~The Rev. Al Sharpton also mourned her death.
"She was a quiet but strong committed woman who made us sit up [with] pride," Sharpton wrote on Twitter. "She will be missed and always remembered."
When her husband became mayor, she retired from her job in the State Department of Taxation and Finance, and took up her role as first lady.
Raised in Harlem, she grew up as one of two daughters of Daniel Burrows, a businessman who became involved in Democratic politics and was among the first Black men to serve in the state Assembly. He encouraged his son-in-law to get into politics.
She went to Howard University, where she majored in sociology, became a member of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority and met her future husband, whom she married in 1953.
Dinkins is survived by her husband, two children and two grandchildren.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Whenever former Mayor David Dinkins mentioned his wife, Joyce, he referred to her as his beautiful bride, and she was indeed beautiful and bountiful too. That beauty and bounty now is part of her enduring legacy as she, at 89, joined the ancestors Sunday, Oct. 11 according to an announcement from Governor Cuomo.
"Very sad to learn of the passing of Joyce Dinkins," the governor tweeted. "Born in NYC, she spent her time as its First Lady with grace & purpose—dedicated to education and a champion of literacy."
More specifically, Joyce Burrows Dinkins was born in Harlem where she was raised in a very prominent and influential family. She was the younger of two daughters of Daniel and Elaine Neltrop Burrows, and began developing her educational acumen while a student at George Washington High School and later at Howard University where she received a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology.
A homecoming queen, she graduated from Howard in 1953, the same year she met and married David. From the very start, they were a dauntless duo, her insight matching and enhancing her husband's ambitions. And on occasion her wit was equal to his. A gifted storyteller, David often recounted how lucky Joyce was to marry him and not a competing suitor. "See, if you had married him you would be the wife of a ditch-digger," he boasted. "No," Joyce responded, "If I married him, he would be mayor and you would be the ditch digger."
This was just a portion of the repartee they shared over their long and productive marriage that was never more crowned than when David was elected mayor in 1989, New York City's first and only African American to hold the office. Without missing a beat, Joyce assumed her duties as First Lady, expanding her position as a coordinator of Metropolitan Affairs in the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance.
Now she could effectively initiate and promote her educational vision, her dedication to the arts for children and health care. Among the responsibilities she eagerly pursued was as honorary chair of the Mayor's Task Force on Child Abuse, which of course dovetailed productively with devotion to the improvement of literacy for the city's children. As Lynda Hamilton observed in her tribute to Mrs. Dinkins, "In 1990, she established 'Reading is Recreation,' a program that brought public school students to Gracie Mansion which expanded to provide special assistance to additional schools located throughout the five boroughs. In recognition of her love for our city's children, the Joyce B. Dinkins Children's Collection was established at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture over a decade ago. The former First Lady was a member of the board of the New York Urban League, WNET/Channel 13, the Historic House Trust of New York City, Big Sisters, Inc., and the Early Stages Theater program. She was also an honorary member of the Black Health Research Foundation, and a member of the New York Bench and Bar Spouses, Inc."
Through all these endeavors, Joyce continued to embellish her partnership with David, as former Congressman Charles Rangel noted in an interview with Michel Marriott in 1990. "He's never had to consider whether he had the support of Joyce,'' he said ''She is not a politician, but a partner, and a partner has a different role.'' She knew how to fulfill her duties without losing sight of being a mother and taking care of family affairs, Rangel added.
Besides her lifetime membership in the NAACP, she was a member in good standing of Howard University's Alumni Association, and closer to home she had an unwavering commitment to the Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement, dedicating the first green, affordable housing development in the city as the Joyce and David Dinkins Gardens. To that end their union continues to flower.
She was predeceased by her parents and her older sister, Gloria Burrows Sparks. She is survived by her spouse and life partner, David N Dinkins; her children, David N Dinkins, Jr, and Donna Dinkins Hoggard; her daughter-in-law, Paula Bormes, son-in-law, Jay Hoggard; grandchildren Jamal Hoggard and Kalila Hoggard Anderson; grandson-in-law, Francois Anderson; sister-in-law, Joyce Dinkins Belton; and numerous cousins, nieces, nephews, god children and beloved friends.
The Dinkins family thanks everyone for their comforting thoughts, prayers and expressions of sympathy. In lieu of flowers, contributions/donations can be made to: Howard University Scholarship Fund, Joyce B Dinkins Children's Collection at Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture and the Calvary Hospital Hospice Care.
Extracted f rom "Beloved First Lady Joyce Dinkins, passes at 89" (Herb Boyd) posted by the New York Amsterdam News on October 14, 2020, 1:24 p.m. | Updated on October 14, 2020, 1:29 p.m.

Thanks to Contributor Loren (45426922) for help with this memorial


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  • Created by: Starfishin
  • Added: Nov 24, 2020
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/218959459/joyce_elizabeth-dinkins: accessed ), memorial page for Joyce Elizabeth Burrows Dinkins (22 Dec 1930–11 Oct 2020), Find a Grave Memorial ID 218959459, citing Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine, Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA; Burial Details Unknown; Maintained by Starfishin (contributor 48860385).