Deborah Tolson, a 75-year-old math teacher who spent more than two decades serving Baltimore's public school students, was found dead inside Arundel Elementary School over the weekend. Police said they discovered no signs of trauma or foul play.
Tolson's body was transported to the state Medical Examiner's Office to determine the cause of death. Students were released from the school at 10:15 a.m. Monday, after officials addressed the situation.
It was not immediately clear when school officials became aware of Tolson's body or whether students were in the building when she was discovered.
A Teacher Who Gave 23 Years to Baltimore
Tolson taught in Baltimore City Public Schools for 23 years and had worked at Arundel Elementary for the past seven years as a math interventionist. By every account available, she poured herself into a community that needed her.
Principal Kerry-Ann Malcolm wrote a letter to the school community acknowledging the loss. She called Tolson far more than a colleague:
"A pillar of the school community, she was beloved by both students and staff."
Seven years at one school is not a rotation. It's a commitment. Tolson was 75 years old and still showing up, still working with children on math fundamentals in a city where academic outcomes have been a crisis for a generation. That kind of dedication doesn't get enough recognition when the person is alive. It shouldn't be overlooked now.
Unanswered Questions
The circumstances surrounding Tolson's death remain frustratingly vague. Baltimore City police told Fox News Digital that investigators found no signs of trauma or foul play, but the cause of death has not been determined.
Malcolm acknowledged the gaps in a measured but careful statement: "We are still gathering additional details and will share what we can at a later time."
That's a reasonable posture in the immediate aftermath. But parents sending their children to a building where a teacher was found dead deserve more than patience. They deserve a full accounting, and soon.
The Human Cost
The Baltimore City Public Schools crisis team has been deployed to Arundel Elementary to support students and staff. For children young enough to attend elementary school, processing this kind of loss is no small thing. These are kids who knew Ms. Tolson, who sat across from her while she walked them through fractions and long division.
Malcolm captured the weight of the moment in her letter:
"Our hearts and thoughts remain with Ms. Tolson's family and friends, as well as our entire school community, in this difficult time."
Baltimore's public schools have endured no shortage of crises in recent years, from chronic absenteeism to deteriorating infrastructure to test scores that should embarrass every official responsible for them. But beneath the policy failures and the institutional rot, there are people like Deborah Tolson: a 75-year-old woman who could have retired years ago but chose instead to keep teaching kids math in one of America's most troubled school systems.
Whatever the Medical Examiner's Office determines about how she died, what's already clear is how she lived. Twenty-three years in Baltimore City Public Schools. Seven years at one school. Beloved by the people who actually knew her.
That's not a career. That's a calling.

