Born in
Seattle in 1921 to Edward and Marjorie Pitter, she graduated from
Garfield High School and studied accounting at the
University of Washington and at
Howard University but did not graduate. She founded and ran an accounting and tax preparation business in Seattle for 48 years until selling the business in 1995. She often helped people who could not pay for her services or who could not read or write English. Her
Seattle Times obituary called her “one of the state’s earliest, most enduring African-American businesswomen.” A lifelong activist in the state
Democratic Party, Pitter King served as chair of the 37th District Democrats, president of the Metropolitan Democratic Central Committee, vice chair of the
King County Democratic Party, and treasurer of the Washington State Federation of Democratic Women. She also served on the boards of the
YMCA and the Seattle
Urban League and on the State Women’s Civil Rights Committee. At the
1964 Democratic National Convention, she campaigned to seat the
Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party. Following the untimely death of
Ann T. O'Donnell, a Democratic state representative from the 37th district, the King County Democrats Executive Board recommended Pitter King to serve out the remainder of O'Donnell's term. The county commissioners appointed her to the legislature effective September 2, 1965. She served through 1966, becoming the first Black woman to serve in the
Washington State Legislature. She sought a full term but lost the Democratic primary election to David Sprague in 1966. She held no other elected office. Married with two sons, she died in Seattle in 1996. ==References==