Dr. Laura Fisher McIntyre - Walsh Cadet Program 1961-64
At the age of 17 in April 1961, high school graduation was just around the corner. I was busy making plans to "begin my life" and just like any fearless teenager short on experience, I thought I had it all planned out. No income. No place to live. After high school, my friend and I were going to move to New York City. Manhattan.
The dreaming was fun until reality intervened. One afternoon, my dad drove me to our parish, St. Anthony's in Canton, to have a talk with Father Patrick O'Leary, our priest. Father O'Leary loved me a lot and knew our family well. He sat there and patiently listened to my big dreams to move to New York and ditch Ohio State Nursing School where I was already accepted. He listened and then he started to talk to me about another possible future - teaching education. As he told me about Walsh College and the Youngstown Diocese cadet program, I found that after a lifetime of Catholic upbringing…I simply could not disagree with him. Especially with my father sitting there!
I grew up in a close-knit Canton community of hard working families, mostly Italians. There were 12 kids in our family - I was the sixth. My parents stressed education and kept a close watch on what we were learning in school. My dad worked in the mills, Republic and Timken, and we were all expected to do chores around the house to help.
My dad made all the arrangements. He even paired me with a girl from Central Catholic, Mary Bordner, so that I would have someone to commute with to Walsh.
Even though Walsh was only 15 minutes from my home, it felt like culture shock for me to be out of the neighborhood. My journey down Market Street was like entering another world to me. I was from a working class neighborhood with 11 brothers and sisters all sharing…well everything…especially clothes. The Walsh girls all seemed sophisticated to me and most of them knew each other from Central Catholic. But I never felt excluded. That's what is so wonderful about Walsh. We were all a part of the whole. I remember the classes were hard work with Brother Robert Francoeur expecting no less than a B grade on any test.
The girls in the cadet program took classes Monday to Friday from 2 to 6 p.m., and Saturday mornings. We never saw the young men on campus. I think they had to be off the grounds by 2 p.m. so that we wouldn't cross paths. I'm sure this was one of the things that my dad and Father O'Leary approved of about Walsh.
I left Walsh and continued my education and career earning my master's and doctorate in education from the University of Akron. I taught for 29 years in Canton City Schools before retirement. Those connections I made decades ago at Walsh have stayed with me as I would often cross paths or work alongside many of the young women I met in the Walsh Cadet Program.
That's how I ended up at Walsh on June 10, 1961, only two days after my high school graduation from Canton McKinley. I never did make it to New York City, but I certainly have no regrets.
Dr. Laura McIntyre spent 36 years as a career educator, teaching mathematics for 24 years at Souers Middle Schools and retiring from the Canton City School District Adult Career and Technical Education program in 2006. She is also known as the mother of music artist Natalie McIntyre, aka Macy Gray, but she is accomplished in her own right as an experienced educator and urban school advocate. She credits her father, Frederick Douglas Fisher, and Father Patrick O'Leary for starting her on her life's career path in education at Walsh College.