Early life, Education And Career Of Sharon Malone
Sharon Malone was born in Mobile, Alabama, to a domestic servant and maintenance worker for Brooklyn Air Force Base in 1959.
She is the youngest child of eight siblings and the sister of Vivian Malone Jones.
In 1981, Malone received her B.A. degree in psychology from Harvard University.
After graduation, she worked at IBM Corporation as a systems engineer.
She then decided to join the medical field and attended medical school at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons for her studies. In 1988 Sharon achieved her M.D. degree.
Then the same year, Malone attended George Washington University to complete her medical residency in Washington DC.
After then, in 1992, She went into private practice with the renowned Foxhall OB/GYN in Washington, D.C. Malone.
She also served as an associate clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at George Washington University and presented the 2012 PBS documentary, Slavery by Another.
The name charts the violent transition from chattel slavery to forced prison labor in 1865.
Alone serves on the boards of the D.C. Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy and the historic Ford's Theater in Washington, D.C.
She also served on the regional panel to select the White House Fellows Program.
She was appointed to the selection committee for the Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction. She had been awarded by the University of Alabama School of Law.
Additionally, Malone has consistently been voted one of Washington Magazine's "Best Doctors."
Malone is married to Eric Holder, the first African American Attorney General of the United States.