Ernestine Jessie Covington was born in
Houston, Texas, the daughter of Benjamin Jesse Covington and Jennie Belle Murphy Covington. Her father was a medical doctor; both of her parents were college graduates, and known to be musical. As prominent African-Americans in Houston, the Covingtons hosted house guests including
Marian Anderson and
Booker T. Washington. Covington began studying piano and violin as a little girl, with Madame Corilla Rochon, a neighbor. By the time she was a teenager, she was playing music in a local women's orchestra and at Baptist church services. Covington graduated at the top of her class from Houston Colored High School, and attended
Oberlin Conservatory of Music as a music student from 1920 to 1924, where she was a charter member of Pi Kappa Lambda honor society. After graduating from Oberlin, she pursued further studies on scholarships at the
Juilliard Musical Foundation, where she worked with
James Friskin and
Olga Samaroff. Covington was the first African American and the first woman to attend Juilliard. Dent accomplished this with support from the
Rosenwald Fund. == Career ==