Background
Evelyn Wynona Moore was born in LaGrange, Georgia in 1923, the daughter of John Wesley Moore, Senior and Annabelle Torian Moore. Her parents met as students at Clark College in Atlanta, and her father owned a pharmacy and worked as a bricklayer.
Education
She finished high school at the age of sixteen and went on to attend Talladega College, where she was a French major. She received a Rockefeller Foundation grant to pursue a Doctor of Philosophy at Columbia University.
Career
After graduation from Talladega she pursued a master"s degree in French studies at Atlanta University and accepted a job teaching French at Morehouse College, an all-male historically black college in Atlanta. At Morehouse, she served as a tutor for Martin Luther King, Junior.
At Columbia, she received a Fulbright fellowship to study at the Sorbonne in Paris, where she stayed for two years (1950-1951). In Paris she met Matthew Lipman, who was pursuing a Doctor of Philosophy in philosophy.
As Matthew Lipman was white, they could not have lived legally in her home state of Georgia or in fifteen other states with anti-miscegenation laws.
On their return to the United States, Wynona Lipman completed her Doctor of Philosophy at Columbia in 1952 and returned to her position as French professor at Morehouse. Matthew Lipman found work teaching at Columbia, and Wynona joined him in New York City, teaching at Elisabeth Irwin High School in Greenwich Village.
They then moved to Montclair, New Jersey. She later became an Associate Professor at Essex County College.
Lipman became active in local Democratic politics in Montclair, serving as Democratic committeeperson and later as town chairman.
She did not seek re-election to a second term as a Freeholder, but instead ran for the New Jersey State Senate. She was successful, defeating incumbent Republican Senator Milton Waldor by a vote of 85,644 to 84,736. Lipman was often the only woman serving in the Senate and was nicknamed "Steel Magnolia".
As the New Jersey State House did not have a restroom for women, a state trooper would stand guard outside the men"s room when she used lieutenant
In the Senate, Lipman served on the Governor"s Advisory Council on Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome and on the Task Force on Child Abuse and Neglect. After legislative redistricting, Lipman and her family moved from Montclair to Newark in 1973 to remain in the 29th legislative district.
She and Matthew Lipman were divorced in 1974. Lipman died of cancer on May 9, 1999.
Her son William had died of cancer in 1984.
Sharpe James was chosen to fill Lipman"s vacancy in the Senate. Lipman was inducted into New Jersey"s "Women"s Hall of Fame" in 1998. In 2003, Kean University dedicated the Wynona Moore Lipman Ethnic Studies Center in her honor.
The Wynona Lipman Child Advocacy Center, a center for abused children, is also named for her.