Four generations of the Alston family have earned degrees in an agricultural discipline at an 1890s university, three of them from N.C. A&T. At left, Antoine Alston, associate dean of academics in the College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, holds a photo of his grandfather, L.C. McLaurin, who earned a dairy science degree from Delaware State; and 2023 animal sciences graduate Kayla Alston holds a photo of her grandfather Albert Alston, an A&T agricultural education graduate.


At N.C. A&T, the “A” is for agriculture, academics – and Alston.

In the 1960s, Albert Alston came to N.C.A&T from Rocky Mount, graduated with a degree in agricultural education and went on to become an agriculture teacher at Northern Nash High School. One of his students was his son, Antoine.

In the 1990s, Antoine Alston followed in his father’s footsteps to N.C. A&T and into agricultural education. He went on to earn his Ph.D. and serve his alma mater as associate dean for academics in the College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences (CAES.)

In 2023, there is Kayla Alston, an N.C. A&T honors student and a USDA 1890s Scholar majoring in animal sciences and minoring in chemistry. This May, she turned her tassel at A&T’s graduation ceremony and became the third generation of her family to pursue an agriculturally oriented degree at N.C. A&T.

Add in maternal grandfather L.C. McLaurin, who earned his dairy science degree in 1940 from Delaware State, and the family spans four generations of 1890 university agriculture.

“It’s kind of unusual, particularly for Black families, to have so many generations of college graduates,” said Antoine Alston. “Our family always believed in education.”

With so much history surrounding her, Kayla Alston’s path might have seemed like a foregone conclusion. She had grown up on campus, in her dad’s office and at football games and homecoming events. But at first, Kayla said, she wanted a new experience.

“I actually looked everywhere else but A&T,” she said. “I’d been here all my life, my dad was here, and he was in my department. But then, I took a formal tour and realized that he and I were just going to have to have some talks and that it was going to work out, because I really wanted the family feel, the smaller programs, the personal touch that you get here.”

On the other hand, Antoine Alston, who had grown up visiting Webb Hall and the University Farm himself, had been patiently watching his daughter for signs of ag interest. He knew that she was hooked from the time she joined The National FFA Organization in high school.

“She started tracking that way, and when she said she wanted to study animal science, I thought, ‘Here we go,’ he said. “I just kind of wanted to nudge her a little bit. And she followed.”

The Alstons negotiated boundaries – no paternal grade-checking or reminders to study harder – and Kayla became a freshman in fall 2019. She didn’t tell people about her pedigree at first.

“I didn’t want people to think I was just here because my dad got me here,” she said. “I told him, ‘You have to be associate dean, not just dad.’ I feel that we’ve done a good job with our relationship. I’ve been able to show that I was here for me, not just because of my dad.”

Animal sciences graduate Kayla Alston worked with researchers in the College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences on a study about mastitis in dairy cows during her four years at A&T.

Kayla made friends and found study groups, only to see the university’s whole dynamic change the next semester, when the campus closed in response to COVID 19.

“It was very hard,” she said. “I wasn’t around my support system as much as I wanted to be.  All the study groups with my friends, and the chance to just to wind down on the weekend, ended. It made it very hard to stay motivated. I had to just keep my end goal in sight.”

Kayla persevered and became a member of Collegiate Farm Bureau, the honors college, the Aggie Mentor Collective and MANRRS (Minorities in Agriculture, Natural Resources and Related Sciences). She was one of only 60 undergraduates and was the only participant from North Carolina chosen to present last summer at Posters on the Hill , a conference presented by the Council on Undergraduate Research.

Kayla knew her grandfather, who passed away in 2022. She did not know her great-grandfather, but she knows that he would be proud.

“It didn’t hit me right away, but now, graduating, I’m realizing that I’m really carrying on my family’s legacy,” she said. “I think they’re looking down, smiling, right now.”

In addition to her dad, Kayla credits many members of her A&T family for her success: student support specialist Kishaa James, whose door is always open; Millie Worku, Ph.D., in whose lab Kayla worked since freshman year; and animal sciences faculty member Andrea Gentry-Apple, DVM, whose role modeling as a Black female veterinarian provided the “tough love” Kayla said she needed.

Next fall, she’ll go to Auburn University on scholarship to get her master’s degree in wildlife sciences, and from there, possibly to work at the USDA.

“I’m extremely proud,” said Antoine Alston. “When I see my daughter out on the farm I worked as a student and that my dad had worked on 30 years earlier – it’s hard to describe. I’ve told her, ‘The sky’s the limit.’ She makes me proud.”