Ms. Audrey Earlene Anderson, a resident of Montgomery, AL., passed away on August 17, 2024. A funeral service will be held on Tuesday, September 3, 2024, at 1:00 p.m. in St. John's AME Church. Burial will follow in Oakwood Cemetery.
Audrey Earlene Anderson was a phenomenal woman, a testament to excellence, grace, and determination. She was born on September 25, 1953, in Montgomery, Alabama, the only child of the union of the late Jewette Langford Anderson and the late Count Earl Anderson. She grew up in a house on Jackson Street that was razed to make way for Interstate 85. Audrey received Christ at an early age under the leadership of Pastor William Harris at St. John’s AME Church where she participated in the choir and the Young People’s Department, one year serving as Youth Day Speaker. She served faithfully in the St. John’s Working Club upon her return to her home church as an adult.
Audrey’s early education laid the foundation for a lifelong pursuit of knowledge and success. She attended Miss McGinty’s Nursery School and Kindergarten and completed first through ninth grades at Alabama State College ( now Alabama State University) Laboratory High School. Her secondary education was completed at Sidney Lanier High School where she was the first Black Varsity Cheerleader and the first Black student chosen as a School Beauty. Academically, Audrey was inducted into the French National Honor Society and the National Honor Society. She was a National Achievement Scholarship recipient and graduated third in her 1971 class. Audrey was active in several clubs in high school, including the math and French clubs, the ROTC Officers Club and sponsor, and the Blue and White feature editor.
During her school years in Montgomery, Audrey’s participation in community activities included being a member of Tots and Teens, Inc., member of the Southern Association of Colored Women’s Clubs, Inc. and she was the 1970 winner of the Miss Teenage Capital City Pageant. Audrey continued to break barriers as the first Black participant in the Montgomery Junior Miss Pageant in 1971. She was a teen model who appeared in the January 1972 issue of Seventeen Magazine.
Choosing Howard University, Audrey enrolled on a full academic scholarship. While there she was a lead majorette for two years, Miss Business School, Miss Omega Psi Phi, and pledged Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. She graduated cum laude with a degree in accounting in May 1975. However, Audrey was not done academically. in subsequent years she earned a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Indiana University and passed the Certified Public Accountant (CPA)exam. She followed those by obtaining a juris doctor degree from Emory University and was licensed to practice law in Alabama and Georgia.
Initially employed by H. J. Heinz Company in Pittsburg after graduating from Howard University, Audrey later took a position in Nashville with the Ernst and Young accounting firm. With her law degree, she was a staff attorney for the U. S. Securities and Exchange Commission in Atlanta. She was an adjunct professor at Southern Polytechnic (now Georgia Perimeter University).
Combining her background in finance, accounting, and law with her work experiences, and other credentials of a lifetime of high achievement, Audrey was appointed Vice President for Fiscal Affairs at Alabama State University (ASU). She was chief steward of a $45 million budget the first female Vice President of Fiscal Affairs at the then 119-year-old institution and the second female Vice President at the time ever appointed at ASU.
Audrey’s leisure activities included relaxing on the golf course, traveling, and spending time with family and friends.
Audrey leaves to cherish her precious memory devoted cousins, Alberta Davis, Danny Davis, Carol Jarrett Perdum, Altre’ Johnson, a loving, dedicated sister-friend, Alma West-Arrington, several God Children, and a host of other relatives, lifelong friends, and AKA line sisters.