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The National Council of Negro
Women, Inc., headquartered in Washington, DC, was founded on
December 5, 1935, by Mary McLeod Bethune, child of slave parents,
distinguished educator and government consultant. Mrs.
Bethune saw the need for harnessing the power and extending the
leadership of Black women through a national organization.
NCNW is an "organization of organizations," and serves as a
clearinghouse for the activities of women. Mrs. Bethune
described "the need for a united organization of women to open
doors for our young women, united so that when it speaks, its
power will be felt.
Under the leadership of Dr. Dorothy I. Height, 38 national
affiliated organization and 250 community-based sections currently
support NCNW.
NCNW Greater Boston Section
The National Council of Negro Women of Greater Boston,
also known as the Greater Boston Section, was founded in January 23,
1992, when the first charter was issued in the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts, largely through the efforts of our founder, Carolyn
Grey. NCNW GBS fulfills its charter by continuing many of the
service programs of the national office, as well as expanding into
new areas.
In addition to local initiatives, the Greater Boston Section of
NCNW has participated in conferences and convention with the
national and global focus. These include the Bethune Recognition
Celebration in New York, in 1992; the International Conference on
Population and Development in Cairo, Egypt, in 1994; the Fourth
World Conference on Women in Beijing, China, in 1995; a Leadership
Conference in New York in 1999; and NCNW National Conventions in
Washington, D.C., in 1993, 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003 and 2005.
For information on the last convention, see
NCNW Convention
2005.
Dr. Dorothy I. Height - National
Council of Negro Women Chair and President Emerita Passes

Dr. Dorothy Height long-time civil rights
activist, chair and president emerita of the National Council of
Negro Women (NCNW) and "godmother of the women's movement," died
of natural causes 3:41 a.m. Tuesday, April 20, 2010 at Howard
University Hospital, 27 days after her 98th birthday.
1912 -2010
1957 - 1998 President National Council of
Negro Women
1994 Presented the Presidential Metal of Freedom
2004 Presented the Congressional Gold Metal
Dr. Height also received thirty-six honorary
degrees.
Civil Rights Legend Dorothy
Height Passes
WASHINGTON (April 20) – Dorothy Irene Height,
long-time civil rights activist, chair and president emerita of
the National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) and "godmother of the
women's movement," died of natural causes 3:41 a.m. Tuesday,
April 20, at Howard University Hospital, 27 days after her 98th
birthday. "I am deeply saddened by the passing today of my dear
friend and mentor, Dorothy Irene Height," former U.S. Secretary
of Labor Alexis M. Herman said. "She was a dynamic woman with a
resilient spirit, who was a role model for women and men of all
faiths, races and perspectives. For her, it wasn't about the
many years of her life, but what she did with them.
"Throughout her life, Dr. Height inspired
countless women to become effective leaders. She advocated for
families and encouraged children to value education and social
justice. To draw on the words of NCNW founder Mary McLeod
Bethune, Dr. Height leaves us love, hope, the challenge of
developing confidence in one another, respect for the use of
power, faith and racial dignity. She was a national treasure who
lived life abundantly. She will be greatly missed, not only by
those of us who knew her well, but by the countless
beneficiaries of her enduring legacy."
For her years of service to the nation, which
stretch back to her work with former First Lady Eleanor
Roosevelt, Height was awarded America’s two highest civilian
awards, the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1994 by President
Bill Clinton and the Congressional Gold Medal in 2004 through an
act of Congress.
Height’s name is synonymous with the NCNW, an
organization she headed from 1957, when she was elected the
organization’s fourth national president, to l998, when she
became the group’s chair and president emerita.
She was a key figure throughout the Civil Rights
Movement. She was the female team leader in the Civil Rights
Leadership, along with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Whitney
H. Young, A. Philip Randolph, James Farmer, Roy Wilkins and John
Lewis. At the 1963 March on Washington, Height was on the
platform when King delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech.
During the civil rights era, Height led NCNW to
deal with unmet needs of women and their families by combating
hunger and establishing decent housing and home ownership
programs through the federal government for low-income families.
Her organization led voter registration drives and established
"Wednesdays in Mississippi" where interracial groups of women
would help at Freedom Schools. The organization’s
accomplishments under Height are numerous. NCNW developed model
international, national and community-based programs that were
replicated by many other groups, from teen-age parenting to pig
"banks" that addressed hunger in rural areas. In 1975, she
initiated the sole African-American private voluntary
organization working in Africa, building on the success of
NCNW's domestic projects.
NCNW established the Bethune Museum and Archives
for Black Women, the first institution devoted to black women's
history, and the Bethune Council House as a national historic
site. The organization dedicated the statue of the first woman
and person of color on public land, Mary McLeod Bethune, in the
nation's Capitol. It also established the Black Family Reunion
Celebration in 1986 to reinforce the historic strengths and
traditional values of the African-American family. Height was
also a key figure in the YWCA beginning in 1937 as assistant
executive director of the West 137th Street branch of the New
York YWCA. From 1944 to 1977, she served on the staff of the
National Board of the YWCA of the USA and held several
leadership positions in public affairs and leadership training.
Additionally, she served as director of the National YWCA School
for Professional Workers. In 1965, she was named director of the
Center for Racial Justice, a position she held until her
retirement. In l970, Height spearheaded the YWCA Convention’s
adoption of its "One Imperative" to the elimination of racism.
Born in Richmond, Va., and reared in Rankin, Pa., Height’s
career as a civil rights advocate began in 1933 when she became
a leader of the United Christian Youth Movement of North America
in the New Deal era.
She worked to prevent lynching, desegregate the
armed forces, reform the criminal justice system and allow free
access to public accommodations. She was also known for her
extensive international and developmental education work.
She was one of 10 American youth delegates to
the World Conference of Life and Work of the Churches in Oxford,
England.
In 1938, Height was one of 10 American youth
invited by Eleanor Roosevelt to spend a weekend at her Hyde
Park, N.Y., home to plan and prepare for the World Youth
Conference to be held at Vassar College. In 1939, she was a
representative of the YWCA to the World Conference of Christian
Youth in Amsterdam Holland. In 1947, Height became national
president of Delta Sigma Theta after serving for three years as
vice president. In 1952, she served as a visiting professor at
the University of Delhi, India in the Delhi School of Social
Work.
Height also experienced her share of the kind of
discrimination that she spent her life fighting. In her memoir,
Open Wide the
Freedom Gates, she described her traveling to New York’s
Barnard College at their request for an interview.
"Although I had been accepted, they could not
admit me," she wrote. "It took me a while to realize that their
decision was a racial matter: Barnard had a quota of two Negro
students per year, and two others had already taken the spots."
She subsequently pursued studies at New York
University, where she earned her Master's Degree in psychology.
At its 1980 commencement ceremonies years later,
Barnard College awarded Height its highest honor, the Barnard
Medal of Distinction. She has received 36 honorary doctorate
degrees.
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