People, Locations, Episodes

Wed, 04.30.189030

L. Viola Kinney, Pianist, and Educator born

L. Viola Kinney

*The birth of L. Viola Kinney is celebrated on this date, c.1890.  She was a Black composer, pianist, and teacher active during the first half of the twentieth century.  

Born Lady Viola Kinney in Sedalia, Missouri, she was one of the five children of Patrick and Lillian Kinney. Her father was a cook, and her mother worked in the shops of the Missouri Pacific Railroad. Kinney studied music at Western University in Quindaro, Kansas.  There she participated in the harmony class and the choral society under Robert G. Jackson, Director of the music department.

After she completed her college education, she moved back to Sedalia, where in 1911, she began a 35-year career as a teacher of music and English at the segregated secondary school Lincoln High School. She became head of the school's music department and gave piano recitals in Sedalia and surrounding towns. She had married Frederick Ferguson, an undertaker, in 1918, but the couple separated in 1925. After the separation, Kinney lived in her widowed mother's house and later reverted to her maiden name.

L. Viola Kinney died in 1945 and was buried in Crown Hill Cemetery in Sedalia. Her composition for solo piano, Mother's Sacrifice, is the only score that has been found. However, she registered the copyrights for at least two other compositions: Show Me, set to a text by Fredericka Douglass Perry (1941), and Time Out for Love (1943).  Her piano piece, Mother's Sacrifice, was published in 1909 and recorded by Albany Records in 2005.  

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To Become a Middle School Teacher

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Poetry Corner

There shall be no more songs of soft magnolias that blow like aromatic winds through southern vales, no more praises of daffodils chattering the winds fluttering tune- and no eulogies... BLACK POWER by Alvin Saxon (Ojenke).
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