Selene Gifford (May 30, 1901 – July 21, 1979) was an American social worker, and an international and federal government official. She won the Federal Woman's Award in 1964, for her work and leadership at the Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Early life
Selene Gifford was born in Rochester, Massachusetts, the daughter of George G. Gifford and Elizabeth Anna Sherman Gifford.
Career
During the Great Depression, Gifford was a social worker in various states. In 1936, she was assistant regional social worker with the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in West Virginia.[1] In 1938 she was a speaker at a Florida state conference on social work.[2] By 1940 she was chief regional supervisor of the WPA in the deep South, and spoke to the Mississippi Conference of Social Workers.[3]
Gifford, who was white, spent most of her career at the Bureau of Indian Affairs.[12][13] She became head of the bureau's Division of Community Services in 1949,[9][14] and assistant commissioner of the bureau in 1952.[15] In 1958, she testified before a House committee on funding for the education of American Indian children.[16][17] In 1961, she testified before a Senate committee on the constitutional rights of the American Indian.[11] She also established job placement programs,[18] studied issues of law enforcement funding,[19] and supported the repeal of discriminatory laws regarding the sale of alcohol to Native Americans, saying "I do not deny that drinking is a problem among the Indians. But isn't it with any group of people?"[20] In 1962, Gifford received the bureau's Citation for Distinguished Service.[12] In 1964, she received the Federal Woman's Award.[21][22] She retired from the bureau in 1965.[14]
^ abUnited States Congress Senate Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights (1962). Constitutional Rights of the American Indian. U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 123–130.