Miss Michigan USA 2024, Alma Cooper, is also a soldier and mathematician

In addition to a tiara, this Miss Michigan also wears a combat helmet.

Alma Cooper — who on Sunday was crowned Miss Michigan USA 2024 at the McMorran Place & Entertainment Center in Port Huron — is a pageant princess, an active-duty Army officer and a data scientist, studying at Stanford University.

She joins the growing ranks of pageant winners who use their reigns to challenge stereotypes and common perceptions of what women can — or should — do.

Alma Cooper, an Army officer, is crowned Miss Michigan USA 2024 on Sunday at the McMorran Place & Entertainment Center in Port Huron.
Alma Cooper, an Army officer, is crowned Miss Michigan USA 2024 on Sunday at the McMorran Place & Entertainment Center in Port Huron.

"As a lifelong Michigander raised in Okemos, I live the American Dream," Cooper told the Free Press on Wednesday, adding that she is grateful to many, especially God, her family and supporters, and is "honored to serve this state and this country."

A 22-year-old second lieutenant who recently returned to California, Cooper is among a small group who also are challenging conservative and liberal views of what a modern woman is and what roles in society she should hold.

Cooper has become comfortable with sticking out.

Or, to put it another way, she doesn't let other people determine what she can do or define who she is.

"I am propelled by the stories of those who have aimed high while serving others," Cooper wrote in a recent essay about why she wanted to be Miss Michigan, adding that if chosen, her "success will be showing others the many meanings of services — and what comes from freeing yourself from limitations."

Alma Cooper, an Okemos High School Graduate, was named Miss Michigan 2024 on Sunday, April 21. She will now to compete for Miss USA 2024 in Hollywood, California.
Alma Cooper, an Okemos High School Graduate, was named Miss Michigan 2024 on Sunday, April 21. She will now to compete for Miss USA 2024 in Hollywood, California.

Cooper is excelling in arenas that, for centuries, were exclusive to men, like the military and mathematics, while also pursuing things she's passionate about, like modeling and competing in pageants, that some feminists feel are frivolous.

And she's not alone.

In January, Madison Marsh — also a second lieutenant and master’s student, but in the Air Force and studying government at Harvard University ― was crowned Miss America in Orlando. The 22-year-old represented the state of Colorado and is set to be a pilot.

Marsh, in a televised interview with CNN, said she was "really, really excited to be the first military member to hold the crown" because she said she felt like it "breaks a lot of stereotypes in pageants and military for women all across the globe."

Cooper, also, in many ways also is both similar — and different — from last year’s Miss Michigan, Maya Schuhknecht, who said after she won that she wanted to advocate for art, which she studied at Michigan State, and to urge other young women to chase their dreams.

More: Chevy employee seeking to be next Miss Michigan USA

And perhaps, like Cooper and Marsh, there will be more beauty queens representing the armed forces and service academies, and even more women will volunteer and graduate.

President Gerald Ford signed the law that allowed women into the all-male academies in 1975. At West Point, the first class had 119 women, and only a little more than half, 62, graduated in 1980. What’s more, some in that class have said, it was a challenge back then just to graduate.

The academy leadership, they said, did not know back then how to address things like women’s haircuts, sexual harassment — and hazing by the male cadets who did not want women there and targeted them and urged them to quit. But now, many added, they are are doing a better job.

Cooper finished near the top of her class academically, held a significant leadership role, and her undergraduate research thesis was on the body-mass index and its implications on the Army’s recruiting goals. When she graduated, it was the first time West Point had a woman as a commencement speaker, the vice president.

Alma Cooper of Mason, Michigan, is set graduate from  the U.S. Military Academy with a bachelor’s degree in mathematical science, and been named a 2023 Knight-Hennessy Scholar at Stanford University.
Alma Cooper of Mason, Michigan, is set graduate from the U.S. Military Academy with a bachelor’s degree in mathematical science, and been named a 2023 Knight-Hennessy Scholar at Stanford University.

In her essay, Cooper wrote about why she wanted to win the pageant. She talked about why she decided to seek an appointment to West Point, how she was a "math nerd" and the "only female mathematical science major" in her class, and the virtues of pageants — at least to her.

"Service," she added, "comes in many forms and my only limitations are the ones I accept," which she called her "guiding credo, an unshakeable belief that has fueled my path as an Afro-Latina woman from a predominantly white, rural Midwestern town."

She also explained: Her mother, Oralia, was a pageant contestant, and her father, Stacey, was an Army major.

"Every mom wants their daughter to follow their dreams, and also, to be their authentic self," Oralia Cooper, 54, told the Free Press, adding that she hopes Alma shows others that "whatever circumstances you are in, isn't what defines you. Who you are is who you want to be."

Alma Cooper said that when she was 14, her mom sewed the dress that she wore to compete in the Miss Michigan Teen USA pageant. She added that her mom attached "hundreds of beads to a handed-down gown."

And, she said, her mother "refused to allow her circumstances to define her destiny."

Competing in pageants, Cooper added, helped her mom build her "self-confidence and determination."

At 16, Cooper said, she attended a summer leadership program at West Point to experience life as a cadet. And when she earned her appointment and arrived to go to school, she said she had "a vision board covered in photos of math equations, designer bags, and former Miss Michigan USAs."

Yet she also realized "no matter how much camouflage I wore, I had no chance of blending in."

Cooper — who will be a military intelligence officer — compared the Army, which "offers unlimited opportunities to those looking to excel," and the Miss Michigan USA competition, which gives her a "platform to inspire others to ignore perceived limitations."

And as Cooper prepares to compete to be Miss USA in Hollywood, California, many — including her family, friends, current and former classmates, and West Point’s dean, an Army brigadier general — are cheering her on.

"Other contestants may be drawn to pageants for their glitz and glamour," Cooper said. "But I see the stage as an opportunity to represent the many girls of color who often go unseen and unheard, and to inspire others to free themselves from circumstances and perceptions about who they are."

Contact Frank Witsil: 313-222-5022 or fwitsil@freepress.com.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Miss Michigan USA 2024 Alma Cooper is a soldier and 'math nerd'