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» Go to news mainMedia Highlight: African‑Nova Scotian woman bridges the gap
From Tuesday's Chronicle Herald:
Chronicle Herald photo.
Shalyn Williams didn’t set out to be a “first.”
But the young Halifax woman does remember thinking, “I’m not like every other girl.”
Now this 27-year-old trailblazer hopes other girls break out of other boxes society creates for them, something she had to do long before reaching a major Nova Scotia milestone.
“It’s the longest title ever,” she laughs today, sitting inside Stadacona, a part of Canadian Forces Base Halifax, where she works for military contractor Lockheed Martin.
“First African-Nova Scotian female engineer.”
She wears the mantle quietly but proudly, even though it came as something of a surprise.
The long-time army reservist, mechanically minded, modest role model learned about the distinction by email, shortly after earning her electrical engineering degree from H University in 2010.
But her determination to take her own path goes way back.
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