[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 19, 2016)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages E520-E521]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IN HONOR OF MRS. EUNICE ELIZABETH ADAIR TINGLING
______
HON. CHARLES B. RANGEL
of new york
in the house of representatives
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Mr. RANGEL. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to celebrate the life, legacy,
and work of Eunice Elizabeth Adair Tingling; who was a well-known
resident of Harlem and Washington Heights. On Friday, February 19,
Eunice passed away after living a full life well-lived.
Eunice Elizabeth Adair was born January 4, 1919 in Anderson, South
Carolina to Margaret Iola Jones, a third generation schoolteacher and
Arthur Aton Adair, a Presbyterian Sunday school missionary. She was the
second of four children and first of two girls. Together with her
siblings, older brother Arthur Eugene (later a Presbyterian minister),
and younger siblings Mary Rose (who became a teacher), and Joseph
Arthur (who became both a minister and a teacher), she lived a busy,
active life full of learning, music, family, church and travel. Eunice
has a proud and extensively documented family history. She was the
granddaughter of formerly enslaved Mary Magdalene Bomar who taught
school for 60 years & Allen Augustus Jones, also formerly enslaved, who
graduated from Maryville College in 1871.
Together they traveled the south as Presbyterian missionaries after
their marriage, organizing schools and churches, teaching other newly
freed blacks to read and write, raising 10 children, all of whom in
turn went to college. While teaching at Brainerd Institute, a unique
historic institution created from a former Freedman's school, later
taken over by the Presbyterian Church, one of their daughters, Margaret
Iola, met and married fellow teacher, Arthur Aton Adair, a union that
produced Eunice and her three siblings. When Eunice was 12, her father
died. Despite Arthur Aton's untimely death from pneumonia, her mother
ensured that all four of the children went on to finish college,
graduating with Joe, the youngest.
Eunice attended Brainerd Institute right across the street from her
home in Chester, SC, where her parents had taught. It was there that
her love of music was further nurtured into a lifelong love. After
graduating from Brainerd at 16, Eunice attended Barber-Scotia Junior
College in Concord, NC, then attended Knoxville College, graduating
with a major in elementary education and minoring in music. On her way
north, she stopped over in Washington, DC during WWII, and got a
government job (after failing the typing test), working in the Food
Stamp Program.
She eventually ended up in Harlem, helping her big brother Gene set
up a day care program at Mt. Morris, the Presbyterian Church he was
rejuvenating in central Harlem. A disastrous first date resulted in her
meeting his brother, and Eunice was introduced to Milton Francis
Tingling, a 1st-generation American of Jamaican parentage, aspiring
statesman and law student that she met at an Episcopalian youth dance.
They married on November 24, 1950.
This union produced three children: Michele, Milton, and Steven.
Prior to the birth of her first child, Michele, Eunice obtained her
Masters Degree in Education from Columbia University Teachers College
on February 28, 1951. Milton and Eunice settled in NYC, raising and
educating their three children. Eunice began teaching in NYC public
schools, and Milton began practicing as an attorney. She was a founding
member and historian for Barristers' Spouses of NY; an elder in Mt.
Morris-Ascension Presbyterian Church; former board member & chair of
Arthur Eugene & Thelma Davidson Adair Community Life Center; also
helped build & was a member of innumerable community & neighborhood
organizations.
Milton preceded Eunice in death on June 9, 1987. Eunice helped her
husband get elected as a judge of the Civil Court of the City of NY in
1982. In 1996, she then assisted her son Milton Adair in his election
to Civil Court of the City of NY in 1996, then, again in 2000 when
Milton was elected to the Supreme Court. In 2014, Eunice attended the
induction of her son, Milton, at the swearing-in as the first black
county clerk in the history of NY State. Eunice was a warrior for God,
her family and her church. This petite, quiet, modest, unassuming but
powerful woman lived a full life, and was truly a role model for the
thousands of women and men whose lives she touched.
Eunice passed on February 19, 2016, at home, surrounded by family per
her wishes. She is survived by children Michele, Milton, & Steven; son-
in-law Rick; daughters-in-law Carolyn (Milton), Tonja (Milton),
Rochelle (Steve), & Lisa (Milton); granddaughters Aija Mai Tingling,
Candyce Vines, Nzingha Michele (Carlos) & Jasmine (Langston) Tingling-
Clemmons; grandsons Toussaint L'Ouverture & Langston Mandela Tingling-
Clemmons; Milton Jordan (Tai), Marcus Jamal & Steven
[[Page E521]]
Joshua Tingling; great-grands Zora Ann Tingling-Clemmons, Malcolm &
Zayed Monadel Coleman-Tingling-Clemmons; sisters-in-law Thelma (Eugene)
& Justine (Joseph); nephews Robert, Richard, & Maurice; nieces Daisy
and Cindy (Rob); dozens of cousins, great-nieces, great-nephews; and
multitudes of friends who were family.
Mr. Speaker, I ask that you and my distinguished colleagues join me
in recognizing Mrs. Eunice Elizabeth Adair Tingling. Great matriarchs
like Mother Tingling are precious gifts we temporarily have in this
world, but their caring assistance, contributions and accomplishments
are far remembered and everlasting.
____________________