NATIONAL


THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF COLORED WOMEN'S CLUB'S, INC.

In 1895, Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin issued a call for a national meeting of
Colored Women to take place in Boston, Massachusetts. Following that
initial meeting, the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs, Inc.
was organized in 1896 in Washington D.C. at the Nineteenth Street Baptist
Church. NACWC grew out of the merger of two nationally representative
organizations. The Colored Women's League of Washington D.C. (formed in
1893) and the National Federation of Afro-American Women. Mrs. Mary
Church Terrell was elected the first president.

Mrs. Terrell was the first national president, and was surrounded by a
company of co-founders and workers and included: Margaret Murray (Mrs.
Booker T. Washington), Hallie Q. Brown, Harriett Tubman, Elizabeth Lindsey
Davis, and Ida Well Barnett.  Later other influential women like Mary McCleod
Bethune joined the organization.

The birth of NACWC in 1896 marked the beginning of a new era for  all
women and families that would provide a vehicle for action through
organized effort which gave way to what would later become the hallmark of
the club  "Continuous Service to Humanity."   
....more.on the National
Association of Colored Women’s Club’s.
History