Daisy Riley Lloyd


Daisy Riley Lloyd was the first female African American to serve in the Indiana legislature. She was one of fifteen Democrats who represented Marion County in the Indiana House of Representatives during the 94th Indiana General Assembly. She later became a realtor and family counselor and continued active in her community.

Early life and education

Born Daisy Riley in Lawrence, Kansas and raised on a farm, she was educated in the local public schools and graduated from Highland Park High School in 1946. In Washington, D.C., she studied economics and sociology and earned a bachelor's degree from Howard University in 1950, supporting her studies by working as a research assistant in the Library of Congress. She also met South Carolina-born fellow student Frank Perry Lloyd, whom she married in 1950.
The couple moved to Germany the following year, after the U.S. Army assigned her obstetrician-gynecologist husband there in 1951. The Lloyd family moved to Indianapolis in 1953. Daisy Lloyd became a homemaker, raising four children and becoming active in her local Roman Catholic church, although she and Dr. Lloyd ultimately divorced. After her political career discussed below, Lloyd received counseling M.A. degrees from Butler University and the Christian Theological Seminary in 1979, and later a PhD. in marriage and family counseling from Purdue University.

Political career

While a homemaker, Lloyd became active politically, later recalling protesting segregation at the Indiana State Fairgrounds. She became active in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the League of Women Voters and the LINKS Indianapolis' chapter.
As a Democrat, Lloyd won election to the Indiana House of Representatives in 1964, becoming one of fifteen Democrats elected to represent Indianapolis and surrounding Marion County. Lloyd became the first African American woman to serve in that legislative body; the winning Democratic slate also included Katherine O'Connell Fruits and Cecilia M. Logan. All three Democratic women legislators served only a single term, since Indiana adopted numbered legislative districts for the next election, which proved to be a Republican landslide. During her legislative service, Lloyd was diagnosed with breast cancer and became one of the first women to discuss her diagnosis and treatment publicly. Republican Harriette Bailey Conn, was elected in that election, and became the only African American woman in the 95th Indiana General Assembly.

Career

Lloyd realized her community was poorly served by realtors, so after her term finished, she studied and received a realtor's license, worked with a firm owned by W.T. Ray, and then started her own business as president of Northside Realty. Inc. Lloyd became active in the National Board of Realtors, the Certified Property Managers Association and the Indianapolis Business Development Corporation. Lloyd also served as a Commissioner of the Indianapolis Public Housing Authority and as a member of the Commission for Higher Education after her legislative service, as well as helped found the Butler Tarkington Neighborhood Association and the Center for Leadership Development.
After receiving counseling degrees from Butler University in 1979 and Purdue University in 1985, Lloyd continued to assist individual clients as well as led retreats. She also received a D. Min. from United Theological Seminary in Dayton, Ohio in 2002. Lloyd also served on the state and national councils of family relations, and became a director of the Alpha Home, Inc. and a member of the Chancellor's Advisory Council of Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. Lloyd was also active in the American Civil Liberties Union, Links, Indianapolis Arts Council; Catholic Charities, Inc.; Community Service Council; Indianapolis Symphony Society; American Cancer Society; The Northeasterners and the Book Lovers Club, among many other activities.