On June 4, 2025, Kitty Clark Stevenson, a native of Hall’s Hill and longtime community organizer, business owner and proud great-grandmother, passed away. Kitty’s friends describe her as a beloved storyteller and a brilliant public speaker who was never afraid to stand up for herself and her neighbors.
Kitty was born on August 1, 1949, to Jalorce M. Clark and Alfred W. Clark, Sr., the first Black firefighter to be paid by Arlington County. She attended Langston Elementary, Swanson Junior High and Washington-Lee High School (now Washington-Liberty). She was one of the first Black children to attend Swanson during integration.
Kitty discusses what it was like to grow up in Arlington County under segregation and the impacts of attending Swanson Junior High during integration.
In her professional life, Kitty built a legacy based on equal rights and public service. She was a human resources management professional for over 50 years and owned a consulting firm, ABLE’N Consulting, LLC. She worked for the Arlington County Personnel Department from 1983 until her retirement in 2000.
Kitty was Arlington’s first full-time Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) Officer, also serving as Personnel EEO Specialist and Selective Placement Program Manager. She was a certified WINDMILLS trainer and trained people with disabilities, managers, employees and personnel specialists on disability awareness and sensitivity issues.
After her retirement, Kitty continued to challenge discrimination through community work. In 2007, she was appointed to the Arlington Human Rights Commission, chairing from 2011 to 2017.
Interview with Kitty Clark Stevenson in which she talks about her work with the Arlington Voting Office and the history of Fire Station No. 8.
Kitty also had a passion for voting. She started working with the Arlington County Department of Voter Registration and Elections in 2002, first as an election officer, then as an Assistant Registrar. She was chief of Precinct 101 in the Douglas Park neighborhood.
As a young woman, Kitty had been instructed by her dad to save her money for the poll tax. When she came of age, around 1970, she went to register to vote. In her memory of that day, she came to the central registrar’s office and waited patiently at the counter to be acknowledged. The Registrar ignored her, continuing to sort papers at the counter.
Eventually, a man entered behind Kitty and the Registrar welcomed him. The man indicated that Kitty had been there first and that she needed to be served. These small acts of indifference and kindness stayed with her and inspired her.
Kitty was committed to ensuring that each person she interacted with on behalf of the Office of Voter Registration felt seen. Gretchen Reinemeyer, Arlington County’s General Registrar, remembers how Kitty endeavored to make voting accessible to all, assisting voters in understanding the law and their options to successfully cast their ballot.
“While there are countless lessons I learned from Kitty over the years, perhaps the greatest was to make the font size larger! A small act of kindness to anyone over the age of 40 who left their readers at home,” said Reinemeyer.
Kitty’s favorite story from the precinct on election day was when a young man came running in and asked for a curbside ballot on behalf of his wife, who was in labor. As Chief Election Officer, Kitty went into a frenzy to gather the necessary paperwork and get the woman voted and on her way to the hospital. Delivering babies wasn’t covered in election officer training.
Kitty Clark Stevenson (left) and Marguarite Gooden (right) in front of the old Fire Station No. 8 building in 2016. From ARLnow.
In 2015, Kitty became a leader in a community effort to preserve Fire Station No. 8, the County’s historically Black fire station, in its original location. In 2014, the Arlington Fire Chief had earmarked Station 8 for possible “relocation, consolidation, replacement or closure” based on the findings of traffic and response time studies conducted by the county.
Plans began to move the station north near Marymount University, with no notice or input from the Hall’s Hill community. When news reached the John M. Langston Citizens Association, they immediately began organizing to prevent the loss of their neighborhood’s historic firehouse.
The daughter of respected Station 8 captain Alfred W. Clark, Sr., Kitty had grown up in the station and understood how important it was to the community. At a time when Black Arlingtonians were barred from movie theaters, restaurants and recreational activities under Jim Crow segregation, Station 8 served as a vital community center. It brought people together from all three historic Black neighborhoods in Arlington, serving Green Valley, Johnson’s Hill and Hall’s Hill.
Firefighters would host movie nights for the neighborhood kids in the 1950s and the station was one of the first places in the area that had a telephone and a color television. Some of the firefighters had even set up their own golf course by the station on Culpeper Street. Neighbors knew they could always stop by to chat, play games and seek refuge.
Fire Station No. 8 at its previous 2209 Culpeper Street location, ca. 1934-1963. From PG 200
In September 2015, after pressure from both the John M. Langston and Old Dominion Citizens Associations, the County Board created a community task force to help determine how to move forward with Station 8.
As one of the five “Fire Station 8 Angels” — including her close friends Marguarite Gooden, Edith Gravely, Peggy Carter Jones and Rochelle Jones-Day — Kitty was integral in the fight to build the new Station 8 on its original site. She was known for being collected but forceful. Kitty spoke out at the county board meetings and made sure that the task force understood the station’s historical significance.
“She was like our spiritual glue, in a sense...the light of the Lord shone through her and helped our lights shine. And I think that’s why they called us the Station 8 Angels,” said Gooden. Jones-Day remembers Kitty as their “Big Sister in Christ,” guiding them with strength and prayer.
First day of operations at the new Station 8 building, June 25, 2024.
In the end, they successfully advocated for a new, larger Fire Station 8 to be built on its original site. As a member of the Fire Station No. 8 History & Legacy Working Group, Kitty helped choose the words that adorn the walls of the new building, including “Resilience,” “Service” and “Dedication.”
While she may not have fought fires like her father, Kitty fought for what she thought was right. Her legacy lives on in Arlington.
Sources:
- County Board to Create Task Force For Fire Station 8 Location | ARLnow.com
- Fire Station 8 | Langston Boulevard Alliance
- Fire Station No. 8 History & Legacy Working Group – Official Website of Arlington County Virginia Government
- Fire Station No. 8 Replacement – Official Website of Arlington County Virginia Government
- Fire Station #8 Task Force – Official Website of Arlington County Virginia Government
- Kitty Clark Stevenson - 2025 - Tyra Baker Thompson Funeral Service
- Legacy: Hall's Hill VFD and Station No. 8 - Arlington Public Library
- Live from Diane's Living Room! Ep. 3 with Kitty Clark Stevenson (pt.1)
- Live from Diane's Living Room! Ep. 3 with Kitty Clark Stevenson (pt.2)
- Original Members of Fire Station 8 Pleased With County’s Decision | ARLnow.com
- Tell Arlington's Story: Kitty Clark Stevenson
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