Dr. Mildred Denby Green
The Tennessee Tribune
January 17, 2019
MEMPHIS, TN — Dr. Mildred Denby Green died on January 8, 2019, she was a college professor, choir director, composer, music
scholar. One of Memphis foremost historians of Black music, she taught
at two of the city’s historically Black colleges for forty years.
The daughter of Howard C. Denby, a painting contractor, and his wife,
Wanetah Benn Denby, she was born on August 25, 1938, in Portsmouth,
Virginia, where she attended Truxton Elementary School and graduated
from I. C. Norcom High School. She attributes her interest in music to early experiences and to studies with noted musicians such as Noah F. Ryder, Undine Moore and Altona Johns.
After two years at Oberlin, she transferred to Ohio State University,
from which she received a bachelor’s degree in music education in
1959. A few months after graduation, on August 15, 1959, she married
Reuben Green, an ordained minister who later became a college professor,
and they had two sons, Reuben II and Howard. In 1962, she received a
master’s in music education, and thirteen years later, she completed a
doctorate in music education from the University of Oklahoma.
Dr. Mildred D. Green has made significant contributions to the
Memphis community through her work as a college professor and music
historian. She and her husband moved to Memphis in 1963, when they
joined the faculty of Owen College, a private Baptist college, where she
directed the choir and taught music appreciation and humanities. When
Owen merged with LeMoyne College in 1968 to form LeMoyne-Owen College,
Dr. Green became a professor of music and director of the choir. In
addition to traditional music courses, she introduced a seminar on Black
women composers and one on Black Memphis musicians. The seminar was
based on research for her doctoral dissertation, which led to
publication of a book, Black Women Composers: A Genesis (1983), that
traces the lives and works of composers Julia Perry, Florence Price,
Margaret Bonds, Evelyn Pittman, and Lena McLin. The course on Black
Memphis musicians developed from a grant that she received from the
United Negro College Fund to document the accomplishments of more than
300 musicians, including singer Carla Thomas, saxophonist Herman Green,
classical pianist Thomas Flagg, and music educator Wendell P. Whalum.
She explains, “I teach about these musicians in class because I believe
it helps students research and learn heritage.”
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