Friendship for ‘WSSU Sisters’ spans five decades
This article first appeared in Archway Magazine.
The year was 1976. Eight young women, entering college for the first time, received their room assignments for Pegram Hall. Little did they know that they would begin a friendship that would span five decades.
Patricia Taborn ‘80, one of eight “WSSU Sisters,” says they were strangers from various parts of North Carolina when they arrived on Winston-Salem State University’s campus, but their similarity made them sisters.
“We all came from humble beginnings,” says Taborn, a registered nurse at Duke University Medical Center. “We’ve learned to love and support one another, which tightened our bond.”
This group of young ladies soon became inseparable. Their best memories together include their study sessions during the
“Some of our most memorable times at WSSU, especially as new freshmen, are studying together during the week and going to the student union dances on Friday nights,” Taborn says. “Then the football games on Saturdays at the stadium. We didn’t know much about football, but when WSSU made a touchdown, we cheered like crazy.”
“Bojangles’ chicken had just come on the scene, and if we had a few dollars to purchase two chicken legs and dirty rice, we were
After graduating in 1980, they explored different career paths and started families, but have remained close friends.
“One year during Homecoming, a few of us decided to meet up,” Taborn says. “The reunion was wonderful. It was heartwarming to reconnect under one roof again. We decided to meet
For over a decade, they have continued to meet yearly, with each sister planning and hosting reunions in her hometown. Some of their stops include Virginia Beach, Durham, Greensboro, Jacksonville, Raleigh and, of course, Winston-Salem, where it all began.
“Many of our family members have been ill, and we have lost loved ones, but we make sure each of us
In addition to Taborn, the WSSU Sisters are: Denis Shird Bennett (Business Administration); Georgia Wilson Fonville (Childhood Education); Sandra Stewart Farrow (Business Administration); Christine Roberts Galloway (Nursing); Shirley Jones (Nursing); Sheila Vanhook McDonald (Special Education); Gwen Roach Tann (Accounting); and Patricia Brown Taborn (Nursing). Navelene Thompson, who Taborn calls their “adopted sister,” also joins them.