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Educator Leona Farris, Black pioneer in Stow, dies at 104


Leona Farris, 104, poses for a photograph with daughter Laura Farris-Daugherty before Stow's dedication ceremony Sept. 16 to rename Silver Springs Lodge as the Leona Farris Lodge.

Leona W. Farris had a simple philosophy: “You eat right, you exercise and you do something for somebody else.”

For more than a century, she lived by the motto that her mother taught her as a little girl. She credited it with her longevity.

Farris died peacefully in her sleep Sunday at age 104 at Copley Place. It was fitting that she died during Black History Month because she was a pioneer in so many ways.

Local history:Akron landmarks in Black history

She and her husband, Dr. Melvin Farris, a family practice physician, were among the first African Americans to live in Stow after they built a home on Fishcreek Road in the early 1950s. Their four children, Judy, Betty, Mel and Laura, were the first Black students in Stow public schools.



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