Alpha Kappa Alpha
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Motto | Service to All Mankind |
---|---|
Colors | Salmon Pink █ and Apple Green █ |
Symbol | Ivy Leaf |
Flower | Tea Rose |
Founded | 1908 at Howard University |
Type | Service |
Scope | International United States, Germany, Japan, Liberia, Jamaica, United States Virgin Islands, Bermuda, Republic of Korea |
Headquarters | 5656 S. Stony Island Ave Chicago, Illinois, USA |
Chapters | 900+ |
Nickname | AKA |
Homepage | Alpha Kappa Alpha website |
Alpha Kappa Alpha (ΑΚΑ) Sorority, Incorporated, formed in January 15, 1908 at Howard University, became America's first Greek-letter organization established by Black college women, and remains a predominately African-American sorority. The sorority's membership, however, includes women of Caucasian, Asian, and Hispanic descent. The sorority serves all mankind through a nucleus of more than 185,000 women in over 950 chapters located in the United States, the Caribbean, Germany, Korea and Japan. Alpha Kappa Alpha women can be found on every continent in the world.[citation needed]
Alpha Kappa Alpha cultivates and encourages high scholastic and ethical standards, promotes unity and friendship among college women, alleviates problems concerning girls and women, maintains a progressive interest in college life. The sorority is a member of the National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC). Among the group's current goals is to have an association that cuts across racial, international, physical, and social barriers to help individuals and communities develop and maintain constructive relationships with others.
Contents |
[edit] History
The Howard University students were led by Ethel Hedgeman Lyle into creating the sisterhood of Alpha Kappa Alpha in 1908. Lyle was inspired by her then high school and college sweetheart George Lyle, a charter member the Beta chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity at Howard in 1907.[1] She viewed the Sorority as an instrument for enriching the social and intellectual aspects of college life by providing mental stimulation through interaction with friends and associates. In 1912, a schism in the sorority led to twenty-two members leaving AKA in 1913 and founding the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority.[2] Nellie Quander led the group which incorporated Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority as a national body in 1912 and as a perpetual body in 1913. The organization will be celebrating their centennial by making a pilgrimage to Howard University on January 15, 2008. [3]
[edit] Membership
- Further information: Famous Members of Alpha Kappa Alpha
From the national office, Alpha Kappa Alpha claims that membership is "comprised of over 185,000 college-trained women from around the world. It has an active membership of over 49,000 members who represent a diverse constituency of women, from educators to heads of state, politicians, lawyers, medical professionals, media personalities and decision-makers of major corporations. Graduate members constitute the largest percentage of membership."[4] AKA has 950 chapters located in the United States, the Caribbean, Germany, Korea and Japan.
[edit] Founders and Executive Directors
The leadership of the sorority in its early year was derived from three separate groups—the original group, the sophomores and the incorporators, whose combination is well known as "The Twenty Pearls."[5] The Executive Director position has been held by nine members since its creation in 1948.
Original Group of 1908 |
Sophomores of 1910 |
Incorporators of 1912 |
Executive Directors |
---|---|---|---|
Anna Easter Brown | Norma Elizabelth Boyd | Nellie M. Quander | Carey B. Maddox-Preston 1948–1974 |
Beulah Elizabeth Burke | Ethel Jones Mowbray | Norma Elizabeth Boyd | Anne Mitchem-Davis 1974–1980 |
Lillie Burke | Alice P. Murray | Julia Evangeline Brooks | Earnestine G. McNealey 1980–1985 |
Marjorie Hill | Sarah Meriweather Nutter | Ethel Jones Mowbray | Barbara A. McKinzie 1985–1987 |
Margaret Flagg Holmes | Joanna Mary Berry Shields | Nellie Pratt Russell | Nan D. Johnson 1987–1988 |
Ethel Hedgeman Lyle | Carrie Snowden | Alison Harris Alexander 1989–1996 |
|
Lavinia Norman | Minnie Beatrice Smith | Emma Lilly Henderson 1997–1998 |
|
Lucy Diggs Slowe | Harriett Josephine Terry | Carey B. Maddox-Preston 1998–1999 |
|
Marie Woolfolk Taylor | Betty N. James 1999–Present |
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. International Presidents[9] |
---|
Nellie Quander, 1913-1919 • Loraine R. Green, 1919-1923 • L. Pearl Mitchell, 1923-1925 • Pauline S. Puryear, 1925-1927 • B. Beatrix Scott, 1927-1929 • Maudelle B. Bousfield, 1929-1931 • Maude B. Porter, 1931-1933 • Ida L. Jackson, 1933-1936 • Margaret D. Bowen, 1936-1939 • Dorothy B. Ferebee, 1939-1941 • Beulah T. Whitby, 1941–1946 • Edna O. Campbell, 1946-1949 • Laura Lovelace, 1949–1953 • Arnetta G. Wallace, 1953–1958 • Marjorie H. Parker, 1958–1962 • Julia B. Purnell, 1962–1966 • Larzette Hale, 1966–1970 • Mattelia B. Grays, 1970–1974 • Bernice I. Sumlin, 1974–1978 • Barbara K. Phillips, 1978–1982 • Faye B. Bryant, 1982–1986 • Janet Jones Ballard, 1986-1990 • Mary Shy Scott, 1990–1994 • Eva L. Evans, 1994–1998 • Norma S. White, 1998–2002 • Linda M. White, 2002–2006 • Barbara A. McKinzie, 2006–current |
[edit] Community service
Alpha Kappa Alpha has established programs which have had a direct impact for the African-American community.
During the Great Migration, members assisted the Travelers Aid Society, helping Southern Blacks adjust to life in North, and volunteered at the Freedman's Hospital. Alpha Kappa Alpha worked with the Mississippi Health Project providing education and books to rural areas, and began a Summer School for Rural Teachers offering courses for self-improvement. The National Non-Partisan Council on Public Affairs was created as a means to lobby politicians. The onset of World War II inspired the council to institute the Direct War Services/Complete Victory/Post War Reconstruction program.
In the 1950s, Alpha Kappa Alpha joined the American Council of Human Rights and National Health Office, implemented programs on health, social action, scholarship, and undergraduate housing as it continued its direction into public service.
The 1960s and 1970s eras paved the path for the AKAs to sponsor job training, reading enrichment, heritage, and youth programs. By encouraging youth to improve math, science, and reading skills, the sorority continued its legacy of community service and its pledge to enrich the lives of others . Alpha Kappa Alpha's high standards of excellence allows students in need and those who chose to study abroad to benefit from a fund created by AKA. Those same high standards stand today as evident in their current programs.
[edit] National programs
[edit] Program Targets
The National Program theme for 2006-2010 administration, led under Alpha Kappa Alpha's International President Barbara A. McKinzie, is "The Heart of ESP: An Extraordinary Service Program." ESP is an acronym for Economics, Sisterhood, and Partnerships. The purpose of ESP is to energize and strengthen service to the community and sisterhood within Alpha Kappa Alpha. The five platforms included in the International Program and implemented in the Ivy AKAdemy are:
-
- Platform I - Non-Traditional Entrepreneur
- Platform II - Economic Keys to Success
- Platform III - The Economic Growth of the Black Family
- Platform IV - Undergraduate Signature Program: Economic Educational Advancement Through Technology
- Platform V - Health Resource Management and Economics
[edit] Ivy Reading AKAdemy
The Ivy Reading AKAdemy provides programs that encourage the entire community to become involved. It serves as an educational and human resource center for programs provided by Alpha Kappa Alpha. Working with No Child Left Behind in mind, "The Ivy Reading AKAdemy," a reading initiative, focuses on early learning and mastery of basic reading skills by the end of third grade. All chapters are requested to implement a kindergarten through third grade after-school reading initiative. A $2.7 million dollar proposal is currently pending with the United States Department of Education to fund a three-year nationwide after-school demonstration project in low-performing, economically deprived inner city schools in 16 sites within the continental United States.
[edit] Educational Advancement Foundation
Alpha Kappa Alpha's Educational Advancement Foundation (EAF) has the mission to promote life-long learning. Staying true to its founding values, they continue to provide scholarships, fellowships, and mini-grants to those who apply and meet the criteria regardless of race, creed, or gender.
[edit] National Pan-Hellenic Council
The sorority is a founder and member of the National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC). The NPHC is composed of nine international predominantly black Greek-letter sororities and fraternities. The NPHC promotes interaction through forums, meetings, and other mediums for the exchange of information, and engages in cooperative programming and initiatives through various activities and functions.[6]
[edit] Trivia
- Senator Hillary Clinton, a former First Lady and wife of President Bill Clinton, initially accepted honorary membership into Alpha Kappa Alpha, but later declined due to its exclusive requirements which would prevent her from accepting honorary membership in other NPHC organizations. [7]
- Eleanor Roosevelt, a former First Lady and wife of President Franklin D. Roosevelt was a honorary member of Alpha Kappa Alpha.
- Alpha Kappa Alpha founder Lucy Diggs Slowe is related to Kappa Alpha Psi founder Elder Watson Diggs.[citation needed]
- Alpha Kappa Alpha supported Alpha Phi Alpha in its denunciation of the film, Stomp the Yard for unauthorized use of the Fraternity’s symbols and trademarks. The support from the sorority aided in a resolution to the satisfaction of the Fraternity, producers Rainforest Productions, Sony Pictures and Screen Gems.[8]
[edit] External links
- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated
- Alpha Kappa Alpha Educational Advancement Foundation, Inc.
- Honorary Members of Alpha Kappa Alpha
- Centennial Celebration
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Mason, Herman "Skip" (1999-04-16). The ties that bind. skipmason.com. Retrieved on May 9, 2006.
- ^ Mason, Herman "Skip" (199-04-20). The ΑΦΑ/ΔΣΘ Connection. skipmason.com. Retrieved on May 11, 2006.
- ^ The ties that bind. skipmason.com (2006). Retrieved on November 2, 2007.
- ^ AKA Membership Profile. aka1908.org. Retrieved on October 2, 2006.
- ^ AKA Leadership. aka1908.com. Retrieved on October 7, 2006.
- ^ National Pan-Hellenic Council Aboutpage. NPHC. Retrieved on August 15, 2006.
- ^ Senator Hillary Clinton. aka1908.com. Retrieved on May 9, 2006. (archive)
- ^ Sorority support of Alpha Phi Alpha aids successful resolution. aka1908.com. Retrieved on January 11, 2007.
- ^ AKA International Presidents[2]. December 2, 2006.
National Pan-Hellenic Council |
---|
Alpha Kappa Alpha • Alpha Phi Alpha • Delta Sigma Theta • Iota Phi Theta Kappa Alpha Psi • Omega Psi Phi • Phi Beta Sigma • Sigma Gamma Rho • Zeta Phi Beta |
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles lacking sources from December 2006 | All articles lacking sources | 1908 establishments | International student societies | United States student societies | National Pan-Hellenic Council