Jefferson Thomas was a track athlete at all-black Dunbar Junior High School in Little Rock when he volunteered to integrate all-white Central High School as a sophomore in 1957. A few days before he entered the school, he celebrated his fifteenth birthday, having been born on September 19, 1942.
Mr. Thomas was a quiet, soft spoken, unique, and special person. He had a subtle, infectious sense of humor that served him well throughout his life. He would find that sense of humor and his love for humanity severely tested by the hate and violence directed toward him by some of the white students at Central High School. Mr. Thomas graduated from Central High School in May 1960.
He served as the narrator of the Oscar winning documentary short, “Nine from Little Rock.”
Mr. Thomas married in 1965 and has one child (Jefferson, Jr.), still living in Los Angeles. Mr. Thomas, Sr. was inducted into the United States Army in 1966. He returned to civilian life in the summer of 1968.
After obtaining a Bachelor Degree in Business Administration from Los Angeles State College, Mr. Thomas went to work as an Accounting Clerk and later, Supervisor for Mobil Oil Corporation. When Mobil Oil moved its Credit Card Operations, Mr. Thomas remained in Los Angeles, and entered Federal Service as an Accounting Clerk with the Department of Defense. The DOD relocated parts of its LA operations to Columbus, Ohio, in 1989. He sold his business and moved to Columbus.
After moving to Columbus, Mr. Thomas continued his commitment to serve the local community, Mr. Thomas took time to serve as a volunteer mentor in the Village to Child Program, co-sponsored by Ohio Dominican University.
He was a frequent speaker at numerous high schools, colleges and universities throughout the country, and an eager mentor to young people. He was the recipient of numerous awards from local and federal governmental agencies. These awards include the NAACP Spingarn Medal, and Congressional Gold Medal, this Nation’s longest-running tradition of honor, for helping make democracy work. He was especially proud of the life-size sculpture of the Little Rock Nine at the Arkansas State Capital in Little Rock, the first in the state honoring living citizens.
Jefferson Thomas retired in September 2004, after 27 years of Federal Service. He departed this life in 2010. His wife, Mary, still resides in Columbus, Ohio.