Alabama’s First Miss America: Her Inspiring Story of Defiance and Staying True to Her Own Values

Her name was Yolande Betbeze. She was known by her friends and family as funny, smart, and beautiful. Most of all, she was a young woman who remained true to her own convictions. After she won the title of Miss America 1951, she refused to make public appearances wearing only a swimsuit. Her defiance and determination to be valued for more than just her physical beauty carved out a unique place in history for the Alabama native and changed the pageant world forever.

Yolande Betbeze was from a middle-class family in Mobile Bay. Her mother was a homemaker, and her father was a well-known butcher who owned a local barbeque stand. Yolande was raised with a strict Catholic background and attended a local Catholic convent school. It was her conservative religious upbringing that instilled a set of values in Yolande—values that she never abandoned.

As a quiet and shy bookworm, Yolande Betbeze was an unlikely pageant winner. She was also of French Basque descent, with fiery dark eyes, an olive complexion, and raven-colored hair. In the age of the blonde bombshell, she didn’t fit the image of the typical American Beauty Queen. In her own words, she was also a “late bloomer.” She dated very little, rarely wore makeup, and had braces on her teeth until the very day she left Mobile to compete in the Miss America pageant.

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