Link Dolly Desselle Adams

Link Dolly Desselle Adams, Eighth President of Links, was born in Marksville, Louisiana. She grew up in New Orleans and graduated from Xavier Preparatory High School there.  Link Adams holds the Bachelor of Arts degree, Magna Cum Laude from Southern University in Baton Rouge and the Masters of Arts degree from the University of Michigan. She earned the Ed.D. from Baylor University in Waco, Texas and has continued post-doctoral study at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois and the University of Washington in Seattle. Her academic areas, Administration and Supervision of Educational Institutions, helped establish the foundation of her life as an educator civic leader churchwoman, wife and mother.

In her professional life she has been a teacher and/or an administrator at each level of schooling from pre-school Head Start through professional school.  She has held faculty positions at eight different colleges and universities including the Neuro-Psychiatric Institute of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor; Wilberforce University, Wilberforce, Ohio; Albany Georgia State College; Paul Quinn College Waco, Texas; Howard University School of Law; Washington, D.C.; and the Interdenominational Theological Seminary, Atlanta, Georgia.

While teaching at Wilberforce University, Link Adams met and married John Hurst Adams, then a faculty member at nearby Payne Theological Seminary.  Connecting Link Adams is a Bishop of the A.M.E. Church and is the Founder and Chairman Emeritus of the Congress of National Black Churches, Inc.  As the wife of the Bishop, Link Adams is the Missionary Supervisor of hundreds of groups of women in the Episcopal District to which the Bishop is assigned. Through the years, as the couple moved from the Tenth District, Texas to the Second, Mid-Atlantic States and the District of Columbia, and to the Sixth, Georgia, the two have formed a trained, spiritually-oriented working team which has made an indelible imprint on American life wherever they have lived. To the care of family, church responsibility and full time employment, Adams added community service and organizational involvement.

Her community volunteer services seem rooted in her concerns for children and young people--service as a member of the board of Children's Protective Services, and the Family Counseling and Children's Services of McLennan County, Texas; Waco (Texas) Neighborhood Youth Center; Secretary of the National Sickle Cell Disease Research Foundation of Los Angeles; Seattle Planned Parenthood and Friends of the Children's Defense Fund Committee are some of her affiliations.

She has served as Newsletter Editor for Church Women United; as Consultant and Speaker for The World Federation of Methodist Women; and as a member of the Board of Directors, UNCF.  For six years she chaired the UNCF Telethon in Waco; for two years was Telethon Chair in Washington, and was UNCF Volunteer of the Year in 1978. She affiliated with the Washington Women's Forum, the National Association of Colored People, and American Association of University Women.  She is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and Phi Delta Kappa and Alpha Kappa Mu Honor Societies.

She was cited by Ebony Magazine as one of the most influential Black Americans from 1982-86; was elected by Dollars and Sense Magazine as one of America's top Business and Professional Women of 1986. Her outstanding participation in civic life continued as she was elected President of the Black Women's Agenda in 1988.  She is a member of the Advisory Boards of WHMM-TV in Washington, D.C. and the African-American Institute in New York City.

Link Adams was inducted into the Seattle Chapter and affiliated with the Angel City Chapter in Los Angeles. When she moved to Waco, Texas where there was no chapter, she helped establish one. She was the Western Area's Director of International Trends and Services and became National Director of this program facet under President Purnell.  During this period of service she established the relationship between The Links and Africare, which resulted in the furnishing of The Links' room at the Africare House in Washington, D.C, and in digging of numerous water wells all over the African continent.

While living in the Eastern Area she joined the Arlington Chapter.  On this rich background of service and experience, she was elected to the national presidency of The Links, Inc.

In her role as president, she presented the final payment on the pledge of one million dollars to the United Negro College Fund (UNCF), the largest contribution to UNCF by any Black organization. In 1985, she led the largest delegation attending the end of the Women's Decade in Nairobi Kenya--a group of over 140 internationally known African-Americans. Adams secured funding for and organized Black Women's Consultation--a coalition of the fifteen largest groups of African-American women in America.  It met four times--Consultation I, II, III, and IV.  However, in the annals of Links, Inc., this President shines as the one who led the group in the purchasing, renovation, furnishing and equipping of the National Headquarters at 1200 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. in Washington. Through her boundless energy and her skillful leadership, the members rallied to pay for the building in full, and to fund an endowment to protect its future.

President Adams and her Connecting Link Bishop John Adams, are the parents of three successful and talented daughters: Link Gaye Adams-Massey, Esquire, Link Dr. Jann Adams Brogdon, Professor at Morehouse College and Madelyn Rose Adams, a Marketing Specialist with the Atlantic Olympic Organizing Committee. They have four grandchildren, three boys and one girl.

In 1984, Link daughter Gaye in introducing her Mother said:

“Throughout her career as educator, administrator, community activist, missionary supervisor and mother extraordinaire, Dr. Adams has always committed herself to doing and being her best.  She brings to any task given her the traits which characterize her and account for her success. Among her traits are creativity, faith, intelligence, concern, determination, thoughtfulness, self-confidence self-direction, generosity, patience, vibrance and style". (Minutes, 1984 Assembly pp. 4,5)  Thousands of Links share Link Gaye's opinion.

 


 
Past Presidents

Link Sarah Strickland Scott
1st National President
1957-1961
Link Margaret Hawkins
2nd National President
1957-1961
Link Pauline Weeden Maloney
3rd National President
1957-1961
Link Vivian J. Beamon
4th National President
1962-1966
Link Helen Gray Edmonds
5th National President
1970-1974
Link Pauline Ellison
6th National President
1974-1978
Link Julia Brogdon Purnell
7th National President
1978-1982
Link Dolly Desselle Adams
8th National President
1982-1986
Link Regina Jollivette Frazier
9th National President
1986-1990
Link Marion Elizabeth Schultz Sutherland
10th National President
1990-1994
Link Patricia Russell-McCloud
11th National President
1994-1998
Link Barbara Dixon Simpkins
12th National President
1998-2002

The Links, Incorporated
1200 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20005
202-842-8686
www.linksinc.org

The Links, Incorporated is a not-for-profit organization of more than 10,000 women of color, committed to enhancing the quality of life in our communities