
Nan Snow 鈥57
ALUMNA | WRITER | AUTHOR | PHILANTHROPIST | PUBLIC SERVANT | ADVOCATE
For decades, Nan Snow 鈥57 has been a resounding champion for the cause of women鈥檚 equality.
Throughout her years of service, Snow has been instrumental in improving women鈥檚 economic opportunities and overall well-being. Her work, which has had a substantial impact on the lives of countless individuals, earned her the 2023 University of Central Arkansas Distinguished Alumni Award.
In her early years, Snow lived in the far western part of Oklahoma. As a child, her father was involved in bridge construction, which forced the family to move every time a bridge was completed.
鈥淚t taught me to adapt and do different things and go different places,鈥 Snow said. 鈥淚t was a very busy and fascinating start to life.鈥
Snow and her family eventually settled in Harrison, Arkansas, which is where she graduated from high school before enrolling at Arkansas State Teachers College.
鈥淚 had always heard good things about it because so many Harrison graduates went to BT天堂鈥 which was ASTC then,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 would visit my friends there, so I was very familiar with it and wanted very badly to go.鈥
Snow even received a private tour from Silas Snow, UCA鈥檚 fifth and longest-serving president (1953-1975).
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 say 鈥榥o鈥 to that sort of invitation,鈥 Snow said. 鈥淚t really has been, and remains to this day, one of the highlights of my life.鈥 Snow says her college experience opened more doors for her than she ever anticipated.
While in school, Snow was editor of The Echo, secretary of her senior class and vice president of Alpha Sigma Tau. She was also a member of Royal Rooters, Alpha Chi and listed as Who鈥檚 Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities. Snow earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in journalism in 1957.
Snow鈥檚 interest in writing and journalism began at a young age. Both her grandfathers owned small-town north Arkansas newspapers. Even though both of them sold the newspaper businesses before she was born, Snow believes their careers influenced her. She wrote a poem in 5th grade that was published in the Harrison High School newspaper.
鈥淭hen, I was hooked. 鈥業鈥檓 a writer,鈥 I thought. From then on, that became my interest,鈥 she said.
Snow worked for several newspapers, starting with high school, then college and as a career, 鈥渄oing a little bit of everything.鈥 She experienced inequality which led to a few key 鈥渁-ha鈥 moments that crystallized her drive to fight for change. The first happened in high school when she and some friends wanted to start a girls鈥 basketball team. The superintendent refused, saying it 鈥渨asn鈥檛 lady-like.鈥 Snow would eventually get to play intramural basketball, as well as touch football, for her sorority at UCA.
鈥淵ou should鈥檝e seen us; it was hysterical,鈥 she said.
Another 鈥渁-ha鈥 moment for Snow came when she applied for a position at the Arkansas Gazette in 1959 after years of experience in a newsroom.
鈥淚 thought the newspaper would be glad to have my experience and would hire me. But they told me that they did not allow women in the city room,鈥 she said. Years later, the newspaper offered her a reporter position, which she turned down.
Those events and others sparked Snow鈥檚 desire to fight for women鈥檚 equality. She earned two master鈥檚 degrees from Southern Methodist University and shifted her career to public service and advocacy. As a graduate student, Snow interned with the Dallas Chamber of Commerce where she helped develop the first Leadership Dallas program.
Much of Snow鈥檚 career was devoted to working in federal service, and she served for a time as the Federal Women鈥檚 Program coordinator for the five-state Dallas Region. During her federal employment, Snow suggested and implemented a nationwide program to train and employ blind persons in Federal Job Information Centers.
Snow has served on many boards. She was selected as the inaugural chair of the Arkansas Women鈥檚 Hall of Fame, and was named president of the Arkansas affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. She also served as a board member for the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, the Arkansas Women鈥檚 History Institute, LifeQuest of Arkansas and Encore for Women鈥檚 Health.
She was president of the Arkansas Chapter of the American Society for Public Administration and a member of the Arkansas Governor鈥檚 Commission on the Status of Women, which produced a landmark report still used as a benchmark on women鈥檚 status.
鈥淲e were very proud that we published the first complete report about women that had been done in literally dozens of years. I was very proud to be a part of that and it did make a lot of difference,鈥 Snow said. 鈥淔or example, in one of the state agencies 鈥 the State Department of Education 鈥 when a young high school girl became pregnant, she was expelled. We got that changed. We felt she especially needed to continue her education with having a child to support. Plus, there was no penalty for the boy involved. That was one of our biggest successes, to give opportunities for those young women.鈥
Snow鈥檚 work with the commission fueled her passion and led to even more equality work. She met like-minded changemakers across the country through conferences and other networking events, including newspaper publisher, civic activist and governmental official Dorothy Stuck (1921-2021). Stuck and Snow formed a management and public relations firm in Little Rock called 鈥淪tuck & Snow Resultants.鈥
Snow authored two books that reached the bestseller list in Arkansas. 鈥淩oberta: A Most Remarkable Fulbright,鈥 which she co-authored with Stuck, received an award of commendation from the American Association of State and Local History. Her second book, 鈥淟etters Home,鈥 is a World War II memoir.
Snow is a founder and charter member of the BT天堂Women鈥檚 Giving Circle, a member of the BT天堂Purple Circle and, most recently, the inspiration for the C.D. Wright Women Writers Conference. She was part of the Arkansas Women鈥檚 Foundation, which started 鈥淕irls of Promise.鈥 She helped BT天堂faculty and staff start 鈥淕irls of Promise鈥 at UCA, which is now UCA鈥檚 鈥淕irl Power in Stem.鈥
As president of Komen and a breast cancer survivor, Snow created a fundraising project called 鈥4 Survivors, 4 Rivers, 4 a Cure,鈥 in which she and three other survivors rafted four rivers, raising $10,000 for the foundation.
She also served as a board member for Southern Methodist University鈥檚 Archives of Women of the Southwest. She was among those honored by the archives in its 鈥淩emember the Ladies鈥 program.
In spite of all her accomplishments, being honored with UCA鈥檚 most distinguished recognition came as a surprise to Snow.
鈥淲hen I got the call from President Houston Davis, and he told me that I had been selected, I think my response is best described as a total shock,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was not something I had ever expected. I really was floored by the news and flattered and honored at the same time. It means a great deal to me.鈥