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Friday, June 19, 2015

"Eva-Lowery-Bowman" {April 25,1899-September 13,1984}

Was born to William & Alice Lowery in Nashville.She attended Pear High School,Walden University,and Tennessee A &I  State Normal College.Her early cosmetology training came from Madame C.J.Walker's Lelia College in Indianapolis,Indiana.She also trained at the Institute of Cosmetology in Jersey City.


Eva married Dr.Leonard Cardell and later married Dr. L.A.Bowman.After the latter marriage,she established and operated,among other businesseses,the Bowman Beauty and Barber College and the Bowman Art School.She is credited with introducing the "cooler curl" to the beauty culture business.She also helped to organize and served as president of the Nashville Chapter of Beauty Culture,which eventually extended statewide to include about seven thousand beauticians across Tennessee.


The administration of Governor Prentice Cooper appointed Eva the state's first African American beauty inspector and examiner of cosmetology,a position she held through the administrations of Cooper,McCord,and Browning in the mid-twentieth century.In 1951 she assumed the position of the Negro Chief Inspector and Examiner to the Board of Cosmetology after the general assembly approved legislation creating the post.Eva also pushed for cosmetology to be included in the curriculum of the Tennessee Vocational School for Colored Girls.Eva further established a summer course on the rules and regulations of the Cosmetology Board at Tennessee  A&I.


Throughout her life Eva had supported civil rights and the African American community in many diffirent ways.After 1956,she assumed a more public role.In that year,she organized and served as president of the South Nashville Civic League,urging the City of Nashville to build new parks and recreational facilities for African Americans.Between 1959 & 1960 she traveled between Nashville and Fayette County regularly to bring supplies,food,and support the county's Tent City.In 1960 she began to help a establish a Nashville chapter of the Urban League,a process that met with success in 1968.Eva also candidacy in 1960 for a seat in the Tennessee House of Representatives.Eva was also the first African American woman to seek election to the Tennessee General Assembly,she lost the August Democratic primary.


Denied state office,she served ably in various civic and women's club positions in Nashville during the 1960s and early 1970s.She was was an active member and leader of the Spruce Street Baptist Church,one of the oldest African American congregations in the state.

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