Dr. Leotus “Lee” Morrison: A Legacy at Madison College

Post Author: Jacob Houser

Leotus Morrison
Dr. Leotus “Lee” Morrison, shown here in 1974, was not only a professor of Physical and Health Education, she was also a pioneer in women’s athletics (Bluestone, 1974).

Dr. Lonnie Leotus “Lee” Morrison was a coach and professor during her tenure at Madison College, later James Madison University. Her focus was on women’s sports, mostly to improve the quality of competition and equality of sports by gender. She became instrumental in the formation and organization of women’s athletics nationwide as well as at James Madison University.

Dr. Morrison came to Madison College in 1954 with a master’s degree in teaching from Georgia Peabody College for Teachers. She was working on her doctorate degree in physical education at Indiana University at that time and completed it during her first few years at Madison College (Olson, 1). She taught nearly every class in the physical education department, coached the Madison women’s basketball team for a few years, and was later the women’s field hockey coach for 17 years.

Dr. Morrison was presented with this award by the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 2000.
Dr. Morrison was presented with this award by the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 2000 (Certificate).

Morrison was influential on the national level as well. In 1971, she became a founding member of the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) and became its president in 1974. The AIAW was an organization devoted to expanding, organizing, and improving women’s athletics nationwide. It was part of a movement to support women’s equality in sports before the passage of Title IX. She was also the AIAW representative to the United States Olympic Committee executive board, in an effort to improve the status of United States’ female athletes against international competitors (Olson, 1). Aside from the AIAW, Morrison was also the president of the South Atlantic Field Hockey-Lacrosse Conference (an affiliate conference of the NCAA), as well as the president of the National Association for Girls and Women in Sport (Olson, 1). She was a member of many other sports related boards. Her impressive resume garnered her national recognition for her work with women’s sports. Throughout her career, she won many awards, including induction to the JMU Sports Hall of Fame as well as the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. Her certificate to the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame is shown above.

Dr. Morrison helped transform Madison College into a modern, comprehensive university. According to Tricia Olson,

“Morrison has been involved in faculty governance and helped write the constitution for the JMU Faculty Senate. She served as the chair for the senate reconciliation committee and the student-faculty relations committee. Morrison favored and supported JMU going co-ed, but still believes in women’s colleges because they provide another option for students. She helped build the men’s athletic program and served on the committee that interviewed Dr. Ronald E. Carrier” (Olson, 2).

Even with all of her accomplishments and busy life governing sports and promoting women’s athletics, she still had time to be a very popular professor among students at Madison College/ James Madison University. Former JMU women’s basketball star Katherine Johnson credits Dr. Morrison with her switch from being an English major to a Physical Education and Health major. Johnson said that Dr. Morrison was a tough but fair teacher and someone who cared about her students (Johnson, 2013). In the popular “Professors You Love” column written by JMU alumni, Donna Farmer Butler said of Morrison, “She gave me hope. She broke the mold. She thought “outside of the box” and accepted those of us who were unable to match the ideal. She encouraged free thinking, welcomed ideas other than her own and set high standards for reasoning.” (Butler, 1) Morrison stayed in contact with former students for years. All of the nation’s female athletes have Dr. Morrison to thank for her hard work and determination in order for them to play the games that they love.

Works Cited:

Bluestone. Harrisonburg: Madison College, 1974.

Butler, Donna Farmer. “She Got Game.” Professors You Love, 2002: 1, http://www.jmu.edu/professorsyoulove/morrison-butler.shtml

Certificate from the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame. 2000: 1, Lee Morrison Papers, Special Collections, Carrier Library, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, Virginia.

Johnson, Katherine. Interview by author. Harrisonburg, VA. April 23, 2013.

Olson, Tricia. “Morrison’s efforts helped shape women’s athletics.” Montpelier Spring 1988: 1-2, Lee Morrison Papers, Special Collections, Carrier Library, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, Virginia.