American Association of University Women
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Formation | 1881 |
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Founders | Emily Fairbanks Talbot,Marion Talbot Ellen Swallow Richards |
Headquarters | Washington, D.C.,U.S. |
Key people | Sally Chamberlain (CEO) |
Website | aauw |
TheAmerican Association of University Women(AAUW), officially founded in 1881,[1]is a non-profit organization that advancesequityforwomenand girls throughadvocacy,education, and research.[2][3]The organization has a nationwidenetworkof 170,000 members and supporters,[3]1,000 local branches,[3]and 800 college and university partners.[4]Its headquarters are in Washington, D.C. AAUW's CEO is Gloria L. Blackwell.
History[edit]
19th century[edit]
In 1881,Emily Fairbanks Talbot,Marion TalbotandEllen Swallow Richardsinvited 15 alumnae from 8 colleges to a meeting in Boston, Massachusetts.[3][5]The purpose of this meeting was to create an organization of women college graduates that would assist women in finding greater opportunities to use their education, as well as promoting and assisting other women's college attendance. TheAssociation of Collegiate Alumnaeor ACA (AAUW's predecessor organization) was officially founded on January 14, 1882. The ACA also worked to improve standards of education for women so that men and women's higher education was more equal in scope and difficulty.[6]
At the beginning of 1884, the ACA had been meeting only in Boston. However, as more women across the country became interested in its work, the Association saw that expansion into branches was necessary to carry on its work. Washington, D.C., was the first branch to be created in 1884, and New York, Pacific (San Francisco), Philadelphia, and Boston branches followed in 1886.
In 1885, the organization took on one of its first major projects: they essentially had to justify their right to exist. A common belief held at the time that a college education would harm a woman's health and result in infertility. This myth was supported by Harvard-educated Boston physician Dr. Edward H. Clarke.[6]An ACA committee led byAnnie Howescreated a series of questions that were sent to 1,290 ACA members; 705 replies were received. After the results were tabulated, the data demonstrated that higher education did not harm women's health. The report, "Health Statistics of Female College Graduates", was published in 1885 in conjunction with theMassachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor.This first research report is one of many conducted by AAUW during its history.[7]
In 1887, a fellowship program for women was established. Supporting the education of women through fellowships would continually remain a critical part of AAUW's mission.
Back in 1883, a similar group of college women had considered forming a Chicago, Illinois branch of the ACA; however, they had reconsidered and formed their own independent organization. They formed the Western Association of Collegiate Alumnae (WACA) withJane M. Bancroftas its first president. WACA was broad in purpose and consisted of five committees: fine arts, outdoor occupations, domestic professions, press and journalism, and higher education of women in the West. In 1888, WACA awarded its first fellowship of $350 toIda Street,aVassar Collegegraduate, to conduct research at theUniversity of Michigan.[8]In 1889, WACA merged with the ACA, further expanding the groups' capacity.
20th century[edit]
In 1919, the ACA participated in a larger effort led by a group of American women which ultimately raised $156,413 to purchase a gram of radium forMarie Curiefor her experiments.[9]
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/51/Five_U.S._voting_delegates_of_AAUW%2C_Paris_Conference%2C_July_1922.png/220px-Five_U.S._voting_delegates_of_AAUW%2C_Paris_Conference%2C_July_1922.png)
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/48/Mrs._E.E._Brownell%2C_1922_President_of_the_American_Association_of_University_Women%2C_S.F._Bay_Branch%2C_Who%27s_who_among_the_women_of_California.jpg/220px-Mrs._E.E._Brownell%2C_1922_President_of_the_American_Association_of_University_Women%2C_S.F._Bay_Branch%2C_Who%27s_who_among_the_women_of_California.jpg)
In 1921, the ACA merged with the Southern Association of College Women to create the AAUW, although local branches continued to be the backbone of AAUW. The policy of expansion greatly increased both the size and the impact of the Association, from a small, local organization to a nationwide network of college educated women, and by 1929, there were 31,647 members and 475 branches.[6]
During World War II, AAUW officially began raising money to assist female scholars displaced by the Nazi led occupation who were unable to continue their work. The War Relief Fund received numerous pleas for help and worked tirelessly to find teaching and other positions for refugee women at American schools and universities and in other countries. Individual branch members of AAUW also participated by signing immigration affidavits of support. During 1940, its inaugural year, the War Relief Committee raised $29,950 for distribution with 350 branches contributing.[citation needed]
The organization was "largely apolitical" until the 1960s.[10]On the other hand, women in the workforce had increased to the extent that they made up 38% of workers by the end of the 1960s. Women graduating from college were looking for good employment. Membership in 1960 was at 147,920 women, most of them middle class.[11]
Activities[edit]
AAUW is one of the world's largest sources of funding exclusively for women who have graduated from college.[12]Each year,[clarification needed]AAUW has provided $3.5 to $4 million in fellowships,grants,and awards for women and for community action projects. The Foundation also funds pioneering research on women, girls, and education. The organization funds studies germane to the education of women.[13]
The AAUW Legal Advocacy Fund (LAF), a program of the Foundation, is the United States' largest legal fund focused solely onsex discriminationagainst women in higher education. LAF provides funds and a support system for women seeking judicial redress for sex discrimination in higher education. Since 1981, LAF has helped female students, faculty, and administrators challenge sex discrimination, including sexual harassment, pay inequity, denial of tenure and promotion, and inequality in women's athletics programs.
AAUW sponsors grassroots and advocacy efforts, research, and Campus Action Projects and other educational programs in conjunction with its ongoing programmatic theme, Education as the Gateway to Women's Economic Security.[14]Along with three other organizations, it founded theCTM Madison Family Theatrein 1965. AAUW joined forces with other women's organizations in August 2011 to launch HERVotes[15]to mobilize women voters in 2012 on preserving health and economic rights.[16]In 2011, the AAUW Action Fund launched an initiative to encourage women to vote in the 2012 election. The campaign was aimed to increase the number of votes by women and to advance initiatives supporting education and equity for women and girls.[17][clarification needed][18]
AAUW's 2011 research report addresses sexual harassment in grades seven through 12.[19]
AAUW's national convention[20]is held biennially. AAUW sponsors a student leadership conference,[21]called the National Conference of College Women Student Leaders (NCCWSL) designed to help women college students access the resources, skills, and networks they need to lead change on campuses and in communities nationwide. The student leadership conference is held annually in Washington, D.C.
Local chapters frequently host speakers who highlight a variety of topics related to women such asMolly Murphy MacGregor,a co-founder of the National Women's History Alliance.[22]
A statement by 16 women's rights organizations including the American Association of University Women, theNational Women's Law Center,theNational Women's Political Caucus,Girls, Inc.,Legal Momentum,End Rape on Campus,Equal Rights Advocatesand theWomen's Sports Foundationsaid that, "as organizations that fight every day for equal opportunities for all women and girls, we speak from experience and expertise when we say that nondiscrimination protections for transgender people—including women and girls who are transgender—are not at odds with women’s equality or well-being, but advance them" and that "we support laws and policies that protect transgender people from discrimination, including in participation in sports, and reject the suggestion that cisgender women and girls benefit from the exclusion of women and girls who happen to be transgender."[23]
Notable members[edit]
- Virginia Cleaver Bacon[24]
- C. Louise Boehringer[24]
- Pauline Suing Bloom[24]
- Kate Brousseau[24]
- Esther Caukin Brunauer
- Marjorie Bell Chambers
- Frances St John Chappelle[24]
- Vinnie B. Clark[24]
- R. Belle Colver[24]
- Della Prell Darknell Campbell[24]
- Permeal J. French[24]
- Harriet A. Haas[24]
- Winifred M. Hausam[24]
- Winifred G. Helmes
- Arleen McCarty Hynes
- Reba Hurn[24]
- Kate Wetzel Jameson[24]
- Rachel Fitch Kent[24]
- Robin Gee
- Sarah Harder
- Nancy A. Leatherwood[24]
- Eva Frederica French LeFevre[24]
- Lillien Jane Martin[24]
- Lena B. Mathes[25]
- Bernice McCoy[24]
- Kathryn McHale(general director of AAUW, 1929-1950)
- Ruth Karr McKee[24]
- Eva Perry Moore[26]
- Ruth Crosby Noble[27]
- Helen Matusevich Oujesky[28]
- Bernice Orpha Redington[29]
- Cora Rigby[30]
- E. Ruth Rockwood[24]
- Wanda Brown Shaw[24]
- M. Elizabeth Shellabarger[24]
- Sarah K. Smith[31]
- Rachel Applegate Solomon[24]
- Fanny J. Bayrhoffer Thelen[24]
- Violet Richardson Ward[32]
- Wilhelmine Wissman Yoakum[24]
- Mary Yost[33]
- Blanche Hinman Dow[34]
- Angie Turner King[35][36]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^"Empowering Women Since 1881".AAUW.Retrieved2014-01-18.
- ^Rita M. Pellen, William Miller (2006),Evolving Internet Reference Resources,Haworth Press,ISBN978-0-7890-3025-2
- ^abcdCullen-Dupont, Kathryn (2000)."American Association of University Women".Encyclopedia of Women's History in America(2nd ed.). Facts on File. pp. 10–11.ISBN978-0-8160-4100-8.
- ^"Who We Are".AAUW: Empowering Women Since 1881.Archived fromthe originalon 2017-03-20.Retrieved2017-04-11.
- ^Lunardini, Christine A. (1994).What every American should know about women's history: 200 events that shaped our destiny.Holbrook, Massachusetts: Bob Adams, Inc. p. 112.ISBN978-1-55850-417-2.
- ^abcLevine, Susan (1995). "Introduction".Degrees of Equality: The American Association of University Women and the Challenge of Twentieth-Century Feminism.Temple University Press. pp.6,9–11, 19.ISBN9781566393263.
American Association of University Women.
- ^Health Statistics of Female College Graduates, 1885. Published by Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor.
- ^Talbot, Marion and Lois Kimball Mathews Rosenberry. The History of the American Association of University Women, Cambridge, MA: Riverside Press, 1931, p, 40-45.
- ^University of Alabama articleaccessed March 11. 2008
- ^""Things to be done which money and men will never provide": The Activism of Montana's AAUW ".Women's History Matters.The Montana Historical Society. 23 December 2014.Retrieved21 December2015.
- ^Levine, Susan (1995). "Mainstream Feminism and the New Activism, 1960-1979".Degrees of Equality: The American Association of University Women and the Challenge of Twentieth-Century Feminism.Temple University Press. pp.140–141.ISBN9781566393263.
- ^"AAUW Fellowships and Grants".Aauw.org. Archived fromthe originalon 2013-02-15.Retrieved2014-01-18.
- ^Sexual Harassment Supportaccessed March 11, 2008ArchivedMay 13, 2008, at theWayback Machine
- ^AAUW,Education as the Gateway to Women's Economic SecurityArchived2007-05-04 at theWayback Machine.
- ^"HERVotes".HERVotes. 2013-02-28. Archived fromthe originalon 2014-01-03.Retrieved2014-01-18.
- ^"Women's Groups Launch HERVotes"(PDF).Retrieved2014-01-18.
- ^"It's My Vote: I Will Be Heard".Youtube.Retrieved2014-01-18.[dead YouTube link]
- ^Scott, Beth (7 November 2012)."Women and the 2012 Election".AAUW.Archived fromthe originalon 22 November 2019.Retrieved20 August2019.
- ^Sarah D. Sparks (7 November 2011),Many Teens Endure Sexual Harassment,retrieved30 November2011
- ^AAUW websiteArchivedFebruary 2, 2007, at theWayback Machine
- ^2007 ConferenceArchivedApril 5, 2007, at theWayback Machine
- ^"AAUW hosts Molly Murphy MacGregor to speak about women's voting rights".Retrieved23 April2019.
- ^"Statement of Women's Rights and Gender Justice Organizations in Support of Full and Equal Access to Participation in Athletics for Transgender People"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2022-09-09.Retrieved2023-12-11.
- ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyBinheim, Max; Elvin, Charles A. (1928).Women of the West: A Series of Biographical Sketches of Living Eminent Women in the Eleven Western States of the United States of America.Los Angeles: Publishers Press.RetrievedAugust 6,2017.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in thepublic domain.
- ^Gilman, Agness Geneva; Gilman, Gertrude Marcelle (1927). "Mrs. George McCown Mathes.".Who's who in Illinois, Women-makers of History.Eclectic publishers. pp. 160–61.Retrieved18 February2024.
- ^American National Biography Online: Moore, Eva Perry
- ^"Ruth Crosby Noble, 91, former trustee".The Record.March 30, 1988 – vianewspapers.
- ^A Guide to the San Antonio Branch of the American Association of University Women Records, 1954-2009
- ^"Bernice O. Redington dies in Seattle at 74 - 18 Mar 1966 - Page 31".Honolulu Star-Bulletin:31. 1966.Retrieved3 October2017.
- ^Muslim Feminism in History: Halidé Edib Adivar
- ^"A. A. U. W. Meets".The Sun Herald.1940-10-04. p. 5.Retrieved2023-04-03.
- ^"Biologue of Founder Violet Richardson-Ward".Archived fromthe originalon 5 October 2017.Retrieved4 October2017.
- ^"Doctor Mary Yost, Former Stanford Dean of Women, Is Claimed by Stroke".The Stanford Daily.125(24). 1954.Retrieved10 January2018.
- ^"BLANCHE DOW, LED UNIVERSITY WOMEN".NY Times.May 26, 1973.Retrieved31 December2019.
- ^"Dr. Angie King Will Speak At NACW Sectional Luncheon".Charleston Daily Mail.Charleston, West Virginia.November 28, 1969. p. 18.Archivedfrom the original on August 5, 2020.RetrievedAugust 4,2020– viaNewspaperArchive.
- ^"Chapter In Greenbrier Marks 25th Anniversary".Beckley Post-Herald.Beckley, West Virginia.May 13, 1974. p. 9.Archivedfrom the original on August 5, 2020.RetrievedAugust 5,2020– viaNewspapers.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- American Association of University Women records, 1935–1955from the SmithsonianArchives of American Art
- American Association of University Women Papersat Smith College
- American Association of University Women. Boston Branch. Records, 1886–1978
- American Association of University Women. Massachusetts State Division. Records, 1930–1976.
- American Association of University Women (AAUW) Collection, 1929-2011 at James Madison University
- Archived records of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, 1882–1921,at Smith College.
- Maryland Division of the American Association of University Women (AAUW)and theMetropolitan Area Mass Media Committee records,atUniversity of Maryland libraries.
- American Association of University Women, New York State Division records,Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation, River Campus Libraries,University of Rochester
- American Association of University Women
- Women and education
- Women's occupational organizations
- Women's organizations based in the United States
- Women's political advocacy groups in the United States
- 1882 establishments in Massachusetts
- American education-related professional associations
- Educational organizations based in the United States
- Feminist organizations in the United States
- Professional associations based in the United States
- Organizations for women in science and technology
- Organizations established in 1882
- Women in Washington, D.C.