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Nia Becnel Papers on Allen Parkway Village

 Collection
Identifier: 2008-019

This collection contains correspondence, reports, and other printed materials formerly belonging to Nia Dorian Becnel, preservationist and former professor at University of Houston College of Architecture. The materials document efforts by Becnel, residents, and other local stakeholders to preserve Allen Parkway Village/San Felipe Courts from demolition.

Included are documents from organizations that Becnel belonged to or collaborated with, such as Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, Allen Parkway Village Task Force, Freedmen's Town Association, and Houston Housing Concern. Also included are public notices from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; and applications and correspondence from the Housing Authority of the City of Houston, which submitted an application for approval to demolish Allen Parkway Village in 1984. The collection contains orders issued by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas prohibiting the use of federal funds for demolition.

Dates

  • 1942
  • 1979-1990

Creator

Language of Materials

English

Conditions Governing Access

Open for research.

Conditions Governing Use

Special Collections owns the physical items in our collections, but copyright normally belongs to the creator of the materials or their heirs. The researcher has full responsibility for determining copyright status, obtaining permission to publish from copyright holders, and abiding by current copyright laws when publishing or displaying copies of Special Collections material in print or electronic form. For more information, consult the appropriate librarian. Reproduction decisions will be made by Special Collections staff on a case-by-case basis.

Extent

0.5 linear feet

Additional Description

Biographical / Historical

Veronica Nia Dorian Becnel, community activist, preservationist, and college professor, was born in Houston, Texas, on October 24, 1949. Her mother was Imelda Dorian, but she was raised by her grandparents, Lee Dorian, Sr., and Mazy Dorian. Veronica grew up in the Acres Homes community of Houston, and she received her early education in Houston public schools. She graduated from M. C. Williams High School in 1967. From there she went on to pursue the B.A. and the M.A. degrees in architecture from the University of Houston (UH). Veronica Dorian married Edwin Robert Becnel on May 26, 1979. They had a daughter and a son.

She was hired by her alma mater in 1985 in the College of Architecture to direct the preservation studies program. During her tenure at UH, much of her efforts were devoted to documenting, preserving, and interpreting the African-American cultural heritage of Texas, including the slave-built structures on the Legg-Ervin Plantation near Nacogdoches, and the relocation of African-American-constructed buildings from Liberty County, Texas, to the plantation and ranch museum at Baylor University. During the 1988–89 school year, Becnel oversaw the reconstruction of the Reis log cabin on the campus of Kolter Elementary School in Houston. Becnel’s research effort focused on tracing the “continuities between West African ornamental design and building typologies and those of Texas and the southern United States.”

Becnel was an activist both on and off the campus of UH. While still a student, she was one of the founding members of the University Black Alumni Association. She also helped to organize Shape Community Center. When Becnel became a professor, she continued in the same activist role. She was a member and former chair of the University Undergraduate Admission Review Committee, a member of the University Undergraduate Council, and president of the Black Leadership Network. In the larger Houston community, she served on the Houston Archeological and Historical Commission. Becnel also served on the boards of the Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, the Acres Home Community Development Corporation, Diverse Works Artspace, and the Rice Design Alliance. She was instrumental in the organization of the Freedmen’s Town, Fourth Ward Neighborhood Association in an effort to preserve this historic community from disappearance via urban renewal.

Veronica Nia Dorian Becnel suffered a stroke and died in Houston at St. Joseph’s Hospital on November 10, 1990. She was buried alongside her grandparents in the Dorian family plot at Paradise North Cemetery in the Acres Homes community of Houston.

Source: Merline Pitre, “Becnel, Veronica Nia Dorian,” Handbook of Texas Online, accessed June 01, 2026, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/becnel-veronica-nia-dorian.

Custodial History

These records were acquired for the University of Houston Libraries in partnership with the Houston History Archives initiative of the UH Center for Public History.

Related Names

Creator

Source

Finding Aid & Administrative Information

Title
Guide to the Nia Becnel Papers on Allen Parkway Village
Status
Completed
Author
Kevin Kinney
Date
2019, 2026
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Repository Details

Part of the University of Houston Libraries Special Collections Repository

Contact:
University of Houston Libraries Special Collections
MD Anderson Library
4333 University Drive
Houston TX 77204-2000 USA
713-743-9750