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Alpha Kappa Alpha History
In 1908, Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority became America's first Greek-letter organization established by Black college women.
Her roots date back to Howard University, Washington, D.C., where the idea for formation was conceived by Ethel Hedgeman Lyle of St. Louis, Missouri.
She viewed the Sorority as an instrument for enriching the social and intellectual aspects of college life by providing mental stimulation through interaction with friends and associates.
Through the years, however, Alpha Kappa Alpha's function has become more complex.
After her incorporation as a perpetual body in 1913, Alpha Kappa Alpha gradually branched out and became the channel through which selected college-trained women improved the socioeconomic conditions in their city, state, nation, and the world.
Alpha
Kappa Alpha Founders
The nine Howard University students were led into a sisterhood in 1908 by Ethel Hedgeman Lyle, Nellie Quander,
and her gallant group who contributed the added dimension of a national organization and perpetual
membership, and those who have come after them, the never-ending stream of eternally young, hopeful
enthusiastic women, must be remembered.
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The Original Group:
Beulah E. Burke
Lillie Burke
Anna E. Brown
Marjorie Hill
Margaret Flagg Holmes
Ethel Hedgeman Lyle
Lavinia Norman
Lucy D. Slowe
Marie Woolfolk Taylor
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The Sophomores of 1908:
Norma Boyd
Ethel J. Mowbray
Alice P. Murray
Sarah M. Nutter
Joanna B. Shields
Carrie E. Snowden
Harriett J. Terry
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The Incorporators:
Norma Boyd
Julia E. Brooks
Ethel Jones Mowbray
Nellie M. Quander
Nellie Pratt Russell
Minnie B. Smith
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