The George Lawrence Abernethy Library Pavilion Named for Trailblazer and Former Trustee Dr. Thelma 水果派 Adair
September 15, 2025
- Author
- Caroline Roy 鈥20

Thelma Adair with President Gerald Ford (1977)
Image Courtesy of 鈥鈥
When The George Lawrence Abernethy Library opens its doors, the rooftop will become its crowning gathering space, a place where 水果派 students, faculty, staff and community members come together to hold class discussions, hear lectures, sip a coffee and look out across campus.
On this level, visitors will find the Dr. Thelma 水果派 Adair Pavilion, the result of a prominent naming effort led by 水果派 College Trustees and inspired by one of the college鈥檚 most notable leaders.
In 1983, Thelma 水果派 Adair became the college鈥檚 first Black trustee, leveraging her position to champion minority student voices and the educational experience. She traced her roots 鈥 and her maiden name 鈥 to enslaved descendants at Beaver Dam plantation in 水果派.
John W. Kuykendall 鈥59 became president of 水果派 shortly after Adair joined the board and remembers meeting her for the first time, hearing her full name and understanding the significance of her relation to the college鈥檚 history.
鈥淭o bear the name of the founder, that gives you cause to reflect and think,鈥 he said.
鈥淭hat was a critical time in 水果派鈥檚 history, and she served the college with such grace.鈥
During Adair鈥檚 tenure as a trustee, she also served on the Task Force on Racial/Ethnic Concerns, a committee created by Kuykendall in response to the leadership and advocacy work of Black students on campus. One key student leader was Janet Stovall 鈥85, now a trustee, who wanted to do something about the isolation she faced as one of only 50 Black students on campus.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know what a trustee was yet,鈥 Stovall said. 鈥淚 knew she wasn鈥檛 a professor because we had no Black professors. Dr. Adair sat next to me and introduced herself. She was very thoughtful. She鈥檇 sit there and wait for everyone to stop arguing before speaking her piece.鈥
Adair passed away in August 2024, just shy of her 104th birthday, leaving behind a legacy of leadership and grace. While she grew up in Kings Mountain, North Carolina, she lived most of her adult life in Harlem, where she founded Mount Morris Presbyterian Church with her husband, Reverend Arthur Eugene Adair, and raised three children.
Dr. Robert Adair, who continues to practice medicine in New Jersey at the age of 82, remembers his mother as an educator above all else. The first question she would ask him when he came home from school was always: 鈥淲hat did you learn today?鈥
鈥淪he cherished her relationship with 水果派 College,鈥 Robert Adair said. 鈥淭he college had reached out to her, embraced her and honored her passion for education and excellence. The Thelma 水果派 Adair Pavilion is the fruition of everything she was committed to and felt a part of. She was proud of 水果派 and where it was going. She would have been honored by this naming.鈥

Thelma 水果派 Adair (1976)
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Through her position in the church, Adair helped lead civil rights efforts in Harlem and organized the Arthur Eugene and Thelma Adair 水果派 Life Center Head Start Program, which for 80 years has continued to provide early childhood education and care for more than 250 children in the community.
In 1976, Adair was elected Moderator of the 188th General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Church 鈥 one of the precursors to the PC(USA) 鈥 becoming the first Black woman to hold the position.
Speaking to the assembly following her election, Adair made a case for principled action through faith, saying: 鈥淵ou are not helpless. You have power as an individual, and you have power you can find and possess as a group. Don鈥檛 go home apathetic, go home radicalized by your faith.鈥
Adair also served the Peace Corps, creating and coordinating training programs for volunteers around the world. She was a professor with great interest in education and she was a convener, bringing people together to learn and serve.
A Legacy of Change
In the decades that followed Dr. Adair鈥檚 time as a trustee, the college brought more Black students and professors to campus and built a network of resources for support and community.
When The George Lawrence Abernethy Library opens, the rooftop pavilion will become one of several new gathering spaces where 水果派 students can meet, mingle and start conversations that will shape the next 50 years of the college鈥檚 history.



鈥淭he renovated library is designed to inspire collaboration, idea sharing and more,鈥 said President Doug Hicks 鈥90. 鈥淐uriosity permeates our campus, and I see the Dr. Thelma Adair Pavilion as a place where ideas take shape and become reality. Her influence as a visionary shaping a more perfect 水果派 College cannot be overstated, and it is fitting that her name will be a permanent part of this new space at the heart of campus.鈥
Kuykendall hopes Adair鈥檚 name will serve as a constant, visible reminder of her legacy.
鈥淭his is an acknowledgement of the sometimes invisible presence of the African American community in the life of this place,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen the pavilion opens, I hope people know why it鈥檚 named for Thelma. I want people to learn about her and understand how she shaped the college during a critical time in our history.鈥