Background
Enedina Marques was born in Curitiba, Paraná, to Paulo Marques and Virgília Alves Marques, who established in the city in the 1910 decade, from unknown procedence.
Enedina Marques was born in Curitiba, Paraná, to Paulo Marques and Virgília Alves Marques, who established in the city in the 1910 decade, from unknown procedence.
Marques graduated in Civil Engineering in 1945 at the Federal University of Paraná, becoming the first black woman engineer in Brazil. The following year she enters the Normal School, where she graduated between 1932 and 1935.
She worked for the Paraná State department of water and energy. According to sources the family established at the Ahú or Portão neighbourhoods, where Dona Duca, as Virgilia was known, worked as a washerwoman. In the 1920s, Dona Duca worked for the family of police officer and major Domingos Nascimento Sobrinho, who had a daughter, Isabel, of the same age as Enedina.
He paid Enedina"s education in private schools.
Between 1925 and 1926, Marques is alphabetized. Together with Isabel, Enedina worked as a teacher in several cities of the state of Paraná,such as Rio Negro, São Mateus do Sul, Cerro Azul, Campo Largo.
She taught classes in a school at the Juvevê neighborhood. In 1940, she entered the University of Paraná"s School of Engineering, where she graduates in 1945, becoming the first female engineer of Paraná and the first black woman engineer in Brazil, with 32 years old.
Before her, two black people graduated in Engineering at the institution – Otávio Alencar (1918) and Nelson José da Rocha (1938).
In 1946, Marques left teaching, and becomes engineering assistant at the State Secretary of Transport and Public Works. The following year she is transferred by governor Moisés Lupion, to the State Department of Water and Electric Power. She worked in the state"s Hydroelectric Plan and acts on the harnessing the waters of rivers Capivari, Cachoeira and IguaçUniversity
Other works by her were the Colégio Estadual do Paraná and the CEU – Casa do Estudante Universitário de Curitiba.
In 1958, major Domingos Nascimento Sobrinho died, leaving Enedina as one of his beneficiaries in his will. In 1961, the sociologist Octávio Ianni interviews Enedina Marques for the Unesco-funded research "Metamorfoses do escravo".In 1962, she retired as a civil servant and is acknowledged by governor Ney Braga, that by decree guaranteed her an retirement income equivalent to the salary of a judge.
In 1981, Marques died of an heart attack at the Lido Building, in downtown Curitiba. She died with no immediate family and her body took much time to be foundation
Diário Popular, a city"s tabloid, depicted her as if she were a complete unknown, causing outrage of the faculty and students of Instituto de Engenharia do Paraná.
In 1988, a street is named after her in Vila Oficinas, at the Cajuru neighbourhood and Enedina was inscribed into the Memorial à Mulher Pioneira, a place built by the Soroptimists – an international human rights organization she was member. In 2006, the Instituto de Mulheres Negras Enedina Alves Marques, in Maringá, is founded.