A strong advocate for community health care and housing, Gibson leaves a lasting legacy in Coconut Grove, where she was born in December 1926.
Coconut Grove lost one of its best this week.
Thelma Gibson, a Black woman who broke barriers, who lifted her community, and who led with determination, character and charm, passed away on Wednesday, 10 months shy of her 100th birthday in December.
In her honor, the Spotlight is republishing a tribute from February 2021 by former Spotlight editor Hank Sanchez-Resnik, drawn in part from a talk Gibson delivered at Ransom Everglades School in 2012.
Funeral services are planned for Feb. 26 and 27. A public viewing will be held on Thursday, Feb. 26 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Christ Episcopal Church, 3481 Hibiscus St. in Coconut Grove, followed by a celebration of life service on Friday, Feb. 27 at the church at 10 a.m.
Editor’s Note: Gibson delivered a TEDx talk at Ransom Everglades School in Coconut Grove in October 2012. A video of her 18-minute talk has been viewed more than 1,500 times.
Coconut Grove Then and Now — Thelma Gibson Remembers
Born in Coconut Grove in December 1926, the third generation of an industrious family that originated in the Bahamas, Thelma Gibson has been true to the title of the memoir she published in 2000, “Forbearance.”
In a life distinguished by courage, determination, and optimism, she has broken new ground and amassed a string of accomplishments, honors, and awards.
Throughout, she has resisted societal forces that would have stopped most people. Hers is a triumph of spirit and determination.
At the time of her birth, the Gibson family lived in a wood-frame house on Charles Avenue without electricity or indoor plumbing. Village West was known as “colored town,” Center Grove “white town.”
Charles Avenue was the main street of the thriving Village West community. Just down the street, Gibson remembers, stood the home of Mariah Brown, the first Black woman to own a home in Coconut Grove. Today the unoccupied house still stands, identified by a historic marker and awaiting full restoration.
Decades later, when Gibson got her first paycheck in Miami, she paid a contractor $50 to install electricity and bought a refrigerator for the family home.
Many of Thelma Gibson’s exploits are the stuff of local legend.
After attending segregated schools in Village West, she went to a Black college in North Carolina for training as a nurse.
Her goal: to work in an operating room at Miami’s Jackson Hospital.
A rude shock awaited her when she applied for a position there and was told she was eligible only to work as a nurse on the “colored floor.”
That inspired her to pursue advanced studies at Florida A&M, Catholic University in Washington, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, after which she returned to a career in public health in Miami-Dade County.
Along the way, she applied to the University of Miami but was unable to take classes on UM’s campus. Undeterred, she applied and was admitted to Columbia University in New York City.
Subsequently, she worked in a facility that helped troubled youth in the Bronx. Now, decades after being turned away by UM, she is a UM trustee emeritus.
She has attended services at Christ Episcopal Church since she was baptized there at the age of three months.
In 1967, she married Theodore Roosevelt Gibson, an Episcopal pastor and president of the Miami chapter of the NAACP. Her husband enjoyed a career both in the church and in Miami politics, earning a position on the Miami City Commission.
The Gibson family rose to prominence and made smart business decisions as well.
They purchased several lots near the intersection of Grand Avenue and Douglas Road, including the property where Gibson Plaza now stands, the first major project in Village West for several decades, offering housing to elderly people at below-market rates.
Read More: Gibson advocates for affordable housing before the City Commission
All of these amount to only a partial list of Thelma Gibson’s remarkable achievements.
In her 94 years, Gibson has experienced several social and cultural transformations.
“I lived as a colored person and then as a Negro and then, in the 70s, as a Black person,” she says with a laugh. “Then they said we were no longer Black, we were African Americans.”
Of much greater concern, she says, is the transformation of the Village West community.
“It frightens me that people of color will no longer be able to purchase homes in Coconut Grove in a section that was built up by the Bahamians who came here in the 1860s and 1870s and built houses from Florida pine,” she says.
“A new house near me sold recently for $1.2 million. We never paid over $100,000 for a house. Now everything is going to be out of reach for people of color.”
There’s promise, she believes, in the possibility of a community redevelopment agency (CRA) for Village West currently in an early stage of being established.
“It’s one of the best things that could happen if we can get it going,” she says.
(Editor’s note: The Miami City Commission voted in 2021 to establish the CRA, but the Miami-Dade County Commission blocked the measure. The stalled effort remains a source of frustration among community leaders.)
Meanwhile, in the era of Covid-19, Gibson enjoys time with nearby brothers, nieces, nephews, and grandchildren, venturing out rarely and combining trips to stores, banks, and doctors.
“I don’t get bored,” she says. “I have a lot of things to do. God has been good to me. I’ve been blessed in so many ways. You keep on keeping on, and you have to be a dreamer.”

















It was an inspiration and an education to know her when I was a multimedia journalism student at UM, and again as a Miami Herald intern. Here she is in a video I did for a story with reporter Jenny Staletovich about the West Grove’s march toward redevelopment. If my efforts accomplished nothing, my NOT reporting on the trolley garage shown in the video did. To avoid a conflict of interest, I stopped covering it and connected the community with a pro bono attorney — and they won! https://vimeo.com/1164709988?share=copy&fl=sv&fe=ci
What an amazing woman, and inspirational life. While her passing is so sad… We know she’s still with us, looking down, and encouraging all that continue to fight for a better world.
We were lucky to have her.