AAUW Historical Summary
Historical notes from the first AAUW meeting - March 19, 1927
Georgia AAUW Past Presidents


AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN:
A Historical Summary

(This article was condensed mainly from a l979 publication of AAUW Membership Services entitled "The AAUW Story" and adapted for the AAUW Columbus Branch Yearbook by Nemia M. Chai, College/University Representative (formerly titled Corporate Representative) of Columbus College to AAUW since l973.

On chilly January l4, l882, a total of 65 women attended a meeting held at Chauncy Hall in Boston to organize "an association of women college graduates with headquarters in Boston." Miss Marion Talbot, one of the first to enroll at Boston University when it opened a liberal arts college and admitted women, spoke to the women assembled and outlined the types of work she believed the proposed organization could perform.  Alice E. Freeman, acting president of Wellesley College, presented several ideas to the group--the new association could promote higher education for women; it could assist college-educated women with a "helpful influence" as they pursued various occupations; it could help them utilize the privilege of higher learning for the good of society and for the individuals themselves. A constitution was drawn up and adopted: membership in the association would be determined on an institutional, rather than a personal basis. And so the nation's (and the world's) first organization of university women, the Association of Collegiate Alumnae (ACA), was initiated at this meeting.

In December l883, the Western Association of Collegiate Alumnae (WACA) was organized in Chicago. One of the first actions of the newly formed group was to provide a Bureau of Correspondence to encourage communication between college women in the U.S., Great Britain, and continental Europe. It was "the first printed indication" that American university women were seeking an international alliance. Another notable accomplishment of the Western Association was the establishment of a fellowship fund especially for women scholars.

In l889, the Western Association merged with the older ACA when members of the two groups met that October in Buffalo, New York.

It was in l903 when the Southern Association of College Women (SACW) was formed with l7 charter members. Angie Warren Perkins, the first woman graduate of Wesleyan College in Connecticut, invited several women to meet in her Knoxville, Tennessee, home on one July afternoon that year to form an organization for women graduates in the South. This organization determined to "devote their energy to the Southern educational problems at close range."

Although more than l40 institutions designated as "colleges for women" existed in the South, only two of these offered four years of academic work. The new SACW went quickly to its tasks: encouraging the colleges for women to upgrade their standards by offering the four-year academic curriculum, campaigning actively for compulsory school attendance, and working for social welfare legislation, including child protection laws.

In l9l7, the first steps toward the merger of the Association of Collegiate Alumnae, already merged with the Western Association, and the SACW were undertaken. The Southern Association appointed a committee to work with the ACA on a general affiliation of the two groups, this step being inevitable since their work and ideals were nearly identical and there were overlapping memberships.

Meanwhile, in l9l9, Dean Virginia Gildersleeve of the ACA, together with Dr. Caroline Spurgeon and Professor Rose Sidgewick of Great Britain, helped to initiate the International Federation of University Women (IFUW) with eight constituent associations--Canada, Czechoslovakia, France, Great Britain, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and the U.S.

In April l921, the union of the SACW with the ACA became complete at a meeting in Washington, D.C. A new name was adopted at this meeting, since the term "collegiate" had little meaning abroad--and the ACA, now including the former Southern Association, became the American Association of University Women. The present national AAUW headquarters, located in Washington, D.C., houses offices of the association for its l50,000 members.

Today, AAUW acknowledges its responsibility to modern society, and that responsibility is fulfilled by individual members working through the branches. At national biennial meetings, delegates from each branch, division, and college/university representatives determine policies to guide the Association. More recently, AAUW objectives have included helping women to gain parity in educational, economic, social, and public life of our nation; these are symbolically represented in the new logo with the three-triangle design which interfaces:

AAUW -- promoting equity for women, education and self-development over the life span, and positive societal change.

AAUW Educational Foundation -- providing funds to advance education, research, and self-development for women and to foster equity and positive societal change.

AAUW's Legal Advocacy Fund -- providing funding and a support system for women seeking judicial redress for sex discrimination.

International connections have astoundingly expanded. AAUW members are also members of the International Federation of University Women which the Association helped to found in l9l9. IFUW links federations/associations in 54 lands, uniting women around the world in working toward common goals and international understanding. Its headquarters are in Geneva, Switzerland.

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Notes from the First Meeting - AAUW Georgia Division - March 19, 1927

The morning session convened at 10:30AM at he Winecoff Hotel in Atlanta.  Dr. Wallace Rodgers of Trinity M.E. Church pronounced the invocation.

The following delegations were introduced: Atlanta, Athens, Macon, Milledgeville, and Rome.  A letter was read from Augusta and a telegram from the Savannah branch.

Mrs. Rodger Lively, Atlanta, presided. The meeting was called to order and the question presented -- Do we wish a state organization? A pamphlet from the National Headquarters was circulated, telling the advantages of a state division. Discussion followed. The points raised were:

  1. A real field for effort in regulating the standards for high school teachers

  2. Cooperation with the State Board of Education in removing illiteracy in the State

  3. An opportunity to work, not so much for local improvements as for a general raising of standards.  County schools of especial interest.

  4. Moved and seconded to organize the Georgia division AAUW.  Passed unanimously.

  5. The draft constitution was read, discussed, amended and passed article by article.

  6. Nominating committee appointed by the Chair.

The Aim for the next year was discussed.  Mrs. Lively, Atlanta, desired it to be to work toward a closer correlation between the high schools and the colleges in the state.  Discussion followed:

  1. Need of weeding out college material early, to e done by a trained psychologist.

  2. Girls frequently finish high school without having had the required courses for college entrance.

First work should be one of investigation and classification, and an attempt to do away with the feeling of antagonism that frequently exists on the part of the high school toward the colleges.

Motion was made that the aim for the division for the ensuring year to be the investigation of the standards and qualifications for high school teachers throughout the state, and to use AAUW influence for raising the standards to a unified minimum prerequisite for a college degree.  Passed.

Meeting adjourned for luncheon.

    Afternoon session: Report of the nominating committee:
    President: Mrs. Rodger Lively, Atlanta
    1st V President:  Mrs. Erna Proctor, Athens
    2nd V President: Dr. Amanda Johnson, Milledgeville
    Secretary: Miss Jennie Loyall, Macon
    Treasurer: Miss Mildred Mell, Rome

Mrs. Lively stressed the necessity for cooperation of and in the branches.  She urged them to aim for quality, rather than quantity.

Speakers for the afternoon session were Dr. Edgar Henderson, Department of Philosophy, University of Georgia.  Miss Jean Davis of Agnes Scott, and Miss Mary Barker.  Dr. Leslie Gaylord of Agnes Scott was the final speaker.  Miss Gaylord attended the International Conference of University Women at Amsterdam in the summer of 1926.  26 nations participated.  The outstanding feature of the conference was the recurrent discussion of the status of married women in the professions, and the advisability of women continuing their careers after marriage.  The consensus of opinion was that before the problem could be solved adequately, the husband would have to be educated up to a truer sense of partnership.

The meeting was adjourned.

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Georgia AAUW Past Presidents

1927-1929 Mrs. Roger T. Lively Atlanta
1929-1933 Dr. Milded Mell Atlanta
1933-1935 Mrs. Julian Quattlebaum Savannah
1935-1937 Mr. John Odum Valdosta
1937-1939 Dr. Amanda Johnson Milledgeville
1939-1941 Miss Mary Gray Atlanta
1941-1943 Mrs. Arthur Gannon Athens
1943-1945 Miss Ada Marvvin Savannah
1945-1946 Dr. Mildred English Milledgeville
1946-1948 Mrs. Margaret H. Blair Savannah
1948-1951 Miss Marie Wood Statesboro
1951-1953 Mrs. J. Milton Murray Macon
1953-1955 Mrs. J.E. (Mildred) Grimes Columbus
1955-1957 Dr. Frances Ross Hicks Milledgeville
1957-1959 Dr. Bernice Freeman LaGrange
1959-1961 Miss Mary Miller Brunswick
1961-1963 Mrs. George C. Hahn Savanna
1963-1965 Dr. Carol G. Pryor Augusta
1965-1967 Mrs. Fulton W. Ray Rome
1967-1969 Mrs. Ernest Nealy Griffin
1969-1971 Mrs. E. L. Askren, Jr. Atlanta
1971-1973 Dr. Dorothy E. Pitman Milledgeville
1973-1975 Mrs. Eleanor L. Granum Warner Robins
1975-1977 Mrs. Frank W. Evans, Jr. Atlanta
1977-1979 Dr. Sandra S. Slates Augusta
1979-1981 Dr. Ouida W. Dickey Rome
1981-1983 Mrs. Edna M. Maddox Macon
1983-1985 Dr. Harris Lentini Savannah
1985-1987 Mrs. JoAn Hartman Valdosta
1987-1989 Mrs. Alta Birdsong Atlanta
1989-1992 Mrs. Bettina Beecher Savannah
1992-1994 Dr. Beth Farokhi Cobb County
1994-1996 Dr. J. Lynn Wolfe Statesboro
1996-1998 Mrs. LaRonnia D. Williams Valdosta
1998-2000 Ms. Sylvia M. Goodyear Cobb County
2000-2002 Ms. Marcia Capriotti Cobb County
2002-2004 Ms. R. Marie Bruner Columbus
2004-2006 Dr. Paula H. Chambers. Valdosta

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