DC -- Penn Qtr -- Natl Council of Negro Women (633 Penn Ave NW):
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- NCNW_080224_02.JPG: Matthew Brady, the famous early photographer, had his studio in this building. The slanted windows were designed to let the light come in for the portraits.
- NCNW_080830_013.JPG: The building on the right has a totally fake facade on this side. All of the windows on the left side of the building are painted in place -- the doors are real. In the distance on the left is the building where Mathew Brady had his studio. The windows at the top are where his studio was.
- NCNW_080830_071.JPG: These paintings were in the National Council of Negro Women, Inc. headquarters at 633 Pennsylvania Avenue NW.
History of 633 PA Avenue
Mrs. Bethune always said:
"My people should have a strong presence in the nation's capital."
Her wish has been fully realized with the acquisition of NCNW's national headquarters located at 633 Pennsylvania Avenue - a place of honor, prestige and influence on America's "Main" street, seated comfortably between the White House and the U.S. Capitol.
NCNW purchased the Bethune Council House at 1318 Vermont Avenue Northwest in 1943. Today it is home to the Bethune Museum and Archives, the only archives devoted to Black Women's history in the United States. By an Act of the 102nd Congress, the Bethune Council House became a unit of the National Park Service. NCNW used the equity from the Council House to initiate the purchase of its current headquarters at 633 Pennsylvania Avenue, Northwest in December 1995.
Our headquarters represents "our women" at the national table and the continued presence of our issues on the national agenda. A spirit of social and civic activism and a devotion to the betterment of the African American community fills this building to which every African American can point with pride.
Slave traders legally operated the "Center Slave Market" on Pennsylvania Avenue at the corner of Seventh Street Northwest.
In 1848 near this site, 76 slaves, including Emily and Mary Edmondson, two teenage girls who followed their four brothers, boarded the schooner the Pearl and attempted to escape to the Underground Railroad.
The story of the slave girls provided the plot and inspiration for Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin. No other single event had a greater impact on the abolitionist movement and congressional debate on slavery.
As Dr. Dorothy I. Height notes, "it seems providential that we stand today on the shoulders of our ancestors with an opportunity to claim this site and sustain a strong presence for freedom and justice."
The above was from http://www.ncnw.org/about/633history.htm
- Wikipedia Description: National Council of Negro Women
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The National Council of Negro Women (NCNW) is a non-profit organization with the mission to advance the opportunities and the quality of life for African American women, their families and communities. NCNW fulfills this mission through research, advocacy, national and community based services and programs in the United States and Africa. With its 38 national affiliate organizations and its more than 200 community based sections, NCNW has an outreach to nearly four million women, all contributing to the peaceful solutions to the problems of human welfare and rights. The national headquarters, which acts as a central source for program planning, is based in Washington, DC, on Pennsylvania Avenue, located between the White House and the U.S. Capitol. NCNW also has two field offices.
History:
The NCNW was founded in 1935 by Mary McLeod Bethune, child of slave parents, distinguished educator, and government consultant. Mary McLeod Bethune saw the need for harnessing the power and extending the leadership of African American women through a national organization.
National and international programs
Some of NCNW's recent programs include:
The high-profile annual Black Family Reunion Program Celebration
Public education and advocacy for African Americans regarding Supreme Court and lower court nominees
Early childhood literacy programs designed to close the achievement gap
A new initiative and publication entitled African American Women As We Age, which educates women on health and finances
A national obesity abatement initiative
A partnership with NASA to develop Community Learning Centers targeting traditionally underserved students
Technical assistance to eight Youth Opportunity Centers in Washington, DC
Some of NCNW's recent international activities include:
Maintaining consultative status at the United Nations to represent the voice of African American women
Partnering with national women's organizations in Benin to deliver technology, literacy, microcredit and economic empowerment programs
Linking youth in Uganda, north Africa and the U.S. in a three-nation educational exchange.
Partnering in the implementation of a large microcredit program in Eritrea extending small business loans and training to more than 500 women.
Serving as an umbrella organization for 39 national and local advocacy groups for women of African descent both in the U.S. and abroad, the National Council of Negro Women coordinates its activities with partners in 34 states. The Council also runs four research and policy centers in its efforts to develop best practices in addressing the health, educational, and economic needs of African-American women. Unfortunately, all of these centers take a lot of resources to run, and with administrative costs upwards of $4 million in 2007, there is comparatively little left over in the group’s approximately $6 million budget for programs.
National Black Family Reunion:
NCNW organizes the National Black Family Reunion, a two-day cultural event celebrating the enduring strengths and traditional values of the African American fathers.
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