Dorothy Brown
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Dorothy Brown made history when she was elected as the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County in 2000, becoming the first African American to hold that position. Reelected to a second term in 2004. As the official keeper of records for all judicial matters brought into one of the largest unified court systems in the world, Clerk Brown is responsible for managing an annual operating budget of more than $100 million and has a workforce of over 2,300 employees.
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[edit] Beginnings
She is one of eight children born to a staunch unionist father and a deeply religious mother. Dorothy remembers her childhood days growing up in the small, southern town of Minden, Louisiana. Although her parents were poor and uneducated, they instilled in their children the values of sacrifice, self-discipline, and the importance of obtaining a good education.
Dorothy can still picture her father working in the laundry room of the Louisiana Army Ammunitions Plant near Minden. He also owned a cotton farm in Athens, Louisiana, where Dorothy and her seven siblings helped him pick and chop cotton. Dorothy’s mother worked as a cook and a domestic. She inspired Dorothy with her strong moral values. The values her parents instilled resulted in Dorothy and her siblings acquiring seven bachelor degrees, six master’s degrees, two Juris Doctor degrees, one doctor of philosophy degree and one certified public accountant’s license.
Dorothy’s humble upbringing fueled her efforts in high school, college and throughout her professional career. She first distinguished herself as captain of the Webster High School girl’s varsity basketball team and continued on by graduating in the top ten percent of her high school class. Throughout high school, Dorothy helped to defray family expenses by working as a housekeeper during the evenings. During the summer months after her junior year of high school, Dorothy worked in a government-funded nutritional program for welfare mothers.
When Dorothy entered college in 1971 at Southern University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, she continued her quest for educational and professional excellence. During the summer vacation of her third year in college, Dorothy worked on a paint assembly line in a factory, Pathfinder, Inc., in Niles, Illinois. The income from this job helped to defray family expenses and pay her college tuition. Dorothy graduated Magna cum Laude from Southern University in 1975.
[edit] Career and Education
In 1977, Dorothy received her license as a Certified Public Accountant (CPA). As a CPA, Dorothy worked for one of the “Big Eight” accounting firms, a major utility company and a major Chicago Bank. She started a minority CPA firm. In 1981, she received her Master’s in Business Administration (MBA) with honors from DePaul University in Chicago.
Fifteen years later in 1996, Dorothy received her law degree (Juris Doctor) with honors from Chicago-Kent College of Law. Dorothy attended law school at night while managing a full-time career during the day and raising her daughter. For nearly a decade, 1991 through 2000, Dorothy served as General Auditor for the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA).
She is a past President of the National Woman’s Political Caucus of Greater Chicago; a past President of the Lutheran Social Services of Illinois; and a past President of the Southeast Case Management Auxiliary Board. Dorothy has served as Treasurer for both Working in the Schools (WITS) and the Illinois Chapter of the American Association of Attorneys and Certified Public Accountants. She is the Founder and Executive Director of the Dorothy Brown Scholarship and Community Development Fund, an organization developed to secure funding for college bound students. Dorothy is a member of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority and she is a proud member of the King of Glory Tabernacle Church of God in Christ. Her professional memberships include the Chicago Bar Association, the Cook County Bar Association, the Black Women Lawyers’ Association, and the Illinois Association of Certified Public Accountants.
[edit] Awards
She was awarded the 2002 Hillary Rodham Clinton Leadership Award from the Illinois Democratic Women, the 2003 Marks of Excellence Award from the National Forum for Black Public Administrators, the 2003 Women of Achievement Award from the Anti-Defamation League, the 2004 NAACP Medal of Freedom Award, the 2005 National Association of Black Accountants’ National Achievement in Government Award and the 2005 “Voice of Freedom Award” from the Harriet Beecher Stowe Fine & Performing Arts Academy.
[edit] Family
Clerk Brown lives in Chicago and has one daughter, Detris, who graduated from Howard University