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Once Excluded From Va. College, Black Professor Takes a Top Post

But DeLaney was scared. So he kept working, taking care of the greenhouse and the animals, setting up labs. His son Damien remembers visiting the lab as a toddler, watching his dad feed a mouse to a snake. Students in the lab remember DeLaney's friendliness, his practical jokes and his kindness: One, just when he had run out of money, found a big bag of groceries on his kitchen table.

In 1979, DeLaney finally got the courage to sign up for a class. Four years later, when he was 40, he quit his job and became a full-time student at Washington and Lee. His wife, the treasurer of Lexington, supported them financially while he took lots of art and biology classes, avoided math and researched John Chavis while studying history. Often he and his son, then in elementary school, would sit across the table, both doing lessons.


Washington and Lee University's Theodore DeLaney, right, looks at a 1965 photo of a high school band with junior Peter Jones. DeLaney will lead the African American studies program. (Stephanie Gross For The Washington Post)

One day after he had graduated from college and started teaching high school in North Carolina, DeLaney opened a letter from Washington and Lee while standing in line at a drug store. A professor he knew had written to urge him to go back to school to get his doctorate.

DeLaney was so shocked he dropped the letter.

But he did it. DeLaney defended his dissertation in summer 1995 at the College of William and Mary with Damien watching -- just months before he started as a freshman there. Then DeLaney went home to Lexington, to the sweeping lawns and patterned brick paths of Washington and Lee.

"We got Ted back -- it's one of the smartest things the school's ever done," said Holt Merchant, chairman of the history department.

There's still a southern gentility to the school, where students smile and drawl hello to strangers, drop purses without worrying about theft and sometimes wear jackets and ties to class in the white-columned buildings. The school still has a hard time recruiting black students, several professors said, to a place where the Old South and Civil War linger. People make pilgrimages to Lee's tomb and to Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson's house a few steps away.

It's something DeLaney can hardly avoid. Sometimes he just walks away -- from a white student years ago who told him he couldn't greet him publicly on campus, from a tourist wearing a Confederate flag T-shirt that said, "If this flag offends you, you need a lesson in history."

He has pushed for change at the college and seen Washington and Lee move forward to recruit students and faculty of different races and cultures from across the country and the world. That's why he was asked to speak about John Chavis in 2001, and why the college now sends out postcards about Chavis. Now 12 percent of the nearly 1,800 undergraduates are not white; about 4 percent of them are African American. In the law school, 19 percent are not white, and 9 percent are African American.

Two years ago, Damien DeLaney graduated from the law school at Washington and Lee, and his father, fighting back tears, got to hand him the diploma.

In class on a recent morning, DeLaney, 61, with his gray beard, bow tie and little round spectacles, wrote on the chalkboard and pushed students to think harder. "He's a superb teacher, students absolutely adore him," Merchant said. "He attracts hordes of followers."

People keep stopping DeLaney as he walks. They know him from the lab, or class, or church, or local Democratic politics, or just because he's Ted DeLaney, and everyone knows Ted DeLaney.

He and his wife live in the tiny, white house in Lexington that his mother bought decades ago; he wanted to stay connected to the black community. It's worn and crowded, he said, but with memories as close at hand as the places worn smooth around the wrought-iron handles of the knotty-pine cabinets.

DeLaney hopes the desegregation project, which started with people meeting in Lee Chapel to tell their stories, will be a book one day. "I want to get some scholarship out there that can be a legacy," he said.

He has one more dream: Someday, before he retires, he wants to leave Washington and Lee. He wants to teach at a historically black college, he said, "to come full circle."

Staff researcher Bobbye Pratt contributed to this report.


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