Millsaps College student Ericka Wheeler named 2016 Rhodes Scholar

Millsaps College senior Ericka Wheeler, pictured here during a study abroad trip to Cuba in 2014 will soon be studying abroad again as a Rhodes Scholar.
Millsaps College senior Ericka Wheeler, pictured here during a study abroad trip to Cuba in 2014 will soon be studying abroad again as a Rhodes Scholar.
Millsaps College senior Ericka Wheeler, pictured here during a study abroad trip to Cuba in 2014 will soon be studying abroad again as a Rhodes Scholar.

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Millsaps College senior Ericka M. Wheeler is a double major in English and history who has plans to become a physician after watching her grandfather suffer from Alzheimer’s disease. Her journeys so far have taken her from Mississippi to Cambodia and Cuba and her next stop will be England, as a Rhodes Scholar.

Millsaps announced Saturday that Wheeler, who is the first African-American woman from Mississippi to claim the prestigious honor, has been chosen as one of 32 U.S. men and women who will enter Oxford University next fall for postgraduate study

“I’m shocked and overwhelmed right now,” she said by telephone following her finalist interview Saturday in Birmingham, Alabama. “I couldn’t believe it when they announced it. I’m still trying to process it.”

Wheeler, who plans to attend medical school later, said she will study medical anthropology at the English university.

The Rhodes Trust scholarships pay all expenses for two or three years of study.

Wheeler, who wrote a thesis tracing how police brutality and race have been treated in fiction since the 1930s, attended Greenwood High School for two years, followed by her junior and senior year at the Mississippi School of Math and Science in Columbus.

Millsaps President Robert Pearigen said Wheeler’s devotion to Mississippi’s Delta region is part of what makes her special.

“She encountered some of the greatest poverty and starkest racial divisions found in the developed world,” Pearigen said in a statement. “She is bound to the place by a sense of duty but is motivated to care for it by a love for its people.”

Wheeler said she was inspired to become a physician after watching her grandfather suffer from Alzheimer’s disease. Since his death, she’s worked with other Alzheimer’s patients to write down their life stories, producing documents for their families.

Wheeler credited the impetus for her application to history Professor Robert McElvaine. As a student of McElvaine, Wheeler traveled to Vietnam and Cambodia after her freshman year and to Cuba after her sophomore year.

“I remember him saying the chances weren’t very great at all, but it would be a good process to go through,” Wheeler said. “They didn’t want to get my hopes up.”

Millsaps said Wheeler would be the sixth student from the Methodist-affiliated college to become a Rhodes Scholar. Spokesman John Sewell said the most recent winner at the college, which has fewer than 1,000 students, was Kenneth Townshend. That 2004 graduate is now special assistant to Pearigen and an assistant professor of political science.

The most recent Mississippi resident to win was Donald “Field” Brown, a 2013 Mississippi State University graduate. Like many colleges, Millsaps grooms candidates for prestigious postgraduate scholarships. Only the University of Mississippi, with 25, has produced more Rhodes Scholars in the Magnolia State.

Rhodes Scholarships were created in 1902 by the will of British philanthropist Cecil Rhodes. Winners are selected on the basis of high academic achievement, personal integrity, leadership potential and physical vigor. The value of the scholarships averages about $50,000 per year.

2016 Rhodes scholars

The 32 American students chosen as Rhodes scholars for 2016, listed by geographic region, as provided by the Office of the American Secretary of the Rhodes Trust:

District 1:

Grace E. Huckins, Weston, Massachusetts, Harvard University

Garrett M. Lam, Wellesley, Massachusetts, Harvard

District 2:

Russell C. Bogue, Guilford, Connecticut, University of Virginia

Evan J. Soltas, Rumson, New Jersey, Princeton University

District 3:

Neil M. Alacha, Rockaway Park, New York, Harvard

Andrew N. Kaplan, New York City, Brown University

District 4:

Jennifer C. Hebert, Pittsburgh, University of Pennsylvania

Rivka B. Hyland, Philadelphia, Harvard

District 5:

Hannah G. Schneider, Hamden, Connecticut, Georgetown University

Isaac M. Stanley-Becker, Washington, D.C., Yale University

District 6:

Machmud A. Makhmudov, Lilburn, Georgia, Oberlin College

Leah S. Michalove, Atlanta, Emory University

District 7:

Zachary S. Fine, New Orleans, New York University

Ericka M. Wheeler, Carrollton, Mississippi, Millsaps College

District 8:

Thomas M. Carroll, Chandler, Arizona, Rice University

Laura C. Roberts, Dallas, Duke University

District 9:

John C. Ruckelshaus IV, Indianapolis, Duke

Logan C. Jackson, Lexington, Kentucky, Northeastern University

District 10:

Ilhan A. Dahir, Columbus, Ohio, Ohio State University

Ashley E. Orr, Columbiana, Ohio, Youngstown State University

District 11:

Sarah B. Kovan, Okemos, Michigan, Michigan State University

Colin T. Higgins, Madison, Wisconsin, University of Wisconsin

District 12:

Jeffrey Ding, Iowa City, Iowa, University of Iowa

Richard J Lu, Ballwin, Missouri, Princeton

District 13:

Emily M. Mediate, Colorado Springs, Colorado, University of Notre Dame

Rachel E. Mullin, Humboldt, South Dakota, College of Saint Benedict

District 14:

Jared C. Milfred, Portland, Oregon, Yale

Mason Y. Ji, Shoreline, Washington, Yale

District 15:

Megan G. Musilli, El Dorado Hills, California, United States Naval Academy

Katherine K. Clifton, Honolulu, Princeton

District 16:

Cameron M. Platt, Santa Barbara, California, Princeton

Hassaan Shahawy, Pasadena, California, Harvard

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