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Wikipedia

Junior League

The Association of Junior Leagues International, Inc. (Junior League or JL) is a private, nonprofit educational women's volunteer organization aimed at improving communities and the social, cultural, and political fabric of civil society. With 295 Junior League chapters in the United States, Canada, Mexico, and the United Kingdom as of 2023,[2] it is one of the oldest and largest of its kind.[clarification needed] Members engage in developing civic leadership skills, fundraising, and volunteering on JL committees to support partner community organizations related to foster children, domestic violence, human trafficking, illiteracy, city beautification, and other issues. Its mission is to advance women's leadership through meaningful community impact through volunteer action, collaboration, and training.

Junior League
Junior League members sell flowers in 1900.
PredecessorJunior League for the Promotion of the Settlement Movement,
New York Junior League
Formation1901; 123 years ago (1901)
New York, NY, U.S.
FounderMary Harriman Rumsey
TypePrivate, 501(c)(3) nonprofit
Registration no.13-1656639
Headquarters80 Maiden Lane
New York, NY 10038
Membership
140,000 women
Key people
Dorothy Payne Whitney (First President, AJLI)
Laurel Lee-Alexander (President)
Subsidiaries291 Junior League chapters
Revenue
$7,195,946 (FY 2019)[1]
Expenses$7,035,466 (FY 2019)[1] inc. direct program support as all members serve as unpaid volunteers
Websiteajli.org

It was founded in 1901 in New York City by Barnard College debutante Mary Harriman Rumsey.

History edit

 
Astor House, clubhouse owned by the New York Junior League (the first League), Upper East Side

The first Junior League was founded in 1901 in New York City as the Junior League for the Promotion of the Settlement Movement. This original chapter is now known as the New York Junior League (NYJL). Its founder was then 19-year-old Barnard College student and debutante Mary Harriman Rumsey, sister of future Governor of New York W. Averell Harriman and daughter of railroad executive Edward H. Harriman.[3][4]

Inspired by a lecture on settlement movements that chronicled the works of social reformers such as Lillian Wald and Jane Addams, Harriman Rumsey organized others to become involved in settlement work. The organization's first project was working at the College Settlement on Rivington Street on Manhattan's Lower East Side. These were the early days of privileged young girls and women leaving their sheltered lives in wealthy neighborhoods to volunteer their time with those who lived in crowded, poverty-stricken areas of cities. This started a legacy of volunteering and social activism that would continue for many decades.

For many years the NYJL's clubhouse was located at 221 East 71st Street in Manhattan. Designed by architect John Russell Pope and opened in 1929, the building contained a swimming pool on the top floor, bedrooms for volunteers, a ballroom, a hairdressing salon, and a shelter for up to 20 abandoned babies.[5][6] Marymount Manhattan College currently owns the building.[6] In 1950 the NYJL clubhouse moved to the former Vincent Astor townhouse (Astor House) at 130 East 80th Street, where it remains as of 2020.[5]

The League quickly branched out and in 1907 became the Junior League for the Promotion of Neighborhood Work. Under President Dorothy Whitney, the League introduced formal training on “social problems” and expanded the scope of their work to include civic issues such as the civic role for women, police, and immigration (100 Years, 25-26). During this time, a number of sister leagues formed in cities including Brooklyn, New York and Portland, Oregon although there was no formal affiliation with the first New York league. A number of other debutante circles, like the Sewing Circle League of Boston began to emulate the League in New York and focus on local social issues (100 Years, 26). Eleanor Roosevelt was an early member of the NYJL, joining in 1903 when she was 19 years old.[4]

In 1921, thirty Leagues joined to form a national association. Until this point, Leagues were only connected by a Bulletin, containing updates about various leagues, and an annual conference. The national association was named the Association of Junior Leagues of America, Inc. and acted as an umbrella organization (Volunteer, 61). A new Constitution was written, and the Board was tasked with acting as an information bureau for the leagues, as well as continuing to publish the Bulletin and coordinating the annual meeting (100 Years, 47.) After serving as New York City's Junior League president from 1907 to 1910, Dorothy Payne Whitney was nominated as the first president of AJLA. Despite the name, there was membership of Leagues located both in America and Canada at the time of the incorporation (100 Years, 61).

AJLA continued to expand in the number of Leagues and in programming. By the middle of the 20th century there were over 150 Junior Leagues located in the United States, Canada, and Mexico (100 Years, 10). There was also a noticeable demographic shift in League members. More and more league members were young, working women or were older, suburban housewives as opposed to debutantes (100 Years, 94). In 1985, a Junior League was established in London which was the first League established outside of North America (100 Years, 154-155). This prompted a name change with the organization official becoming the Association of Junior Leagues International, Inc. (History Timeline).

Legacy of Voluntarism edit

The idea that women can meaningfully contribute to solving social issues and bettering communities through voluntarism has been a core tenet of the Junior League since its conception. In the Junior League’s 1906 Annual Report, Harriman Rumsey emphasized the organization’s imperative to alleviate civic ills: “It seems almost inhuman that we should live so close to suffering and poverty ... within a few blocks of our own home and bear no part in this great life” (100 Years, Introduction). This altruistic spirit inspired Harriman Rumsey to organize a group of 80 young women to volunteer for the College Settlement on Rivington Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Every week, League members would teach classes, hand out library books and engage in other enriching activities for children at the settlement house. Eleanor Roosevelt, who joined the Junior League in 1903 and served as League secretary in 1904, also taught dance and calisthenic classes at the Rivington Street Settlement House (100 Years, 21).

The Junior League House for Working Girls (Junior League Hotel) grew out of the organization’s early volunteer work with settlement movements. Dorothy Payne Whitney, president of the New York League from 1907 to 1909, and League members began to engage in conversations around how they might best support working women in the city. There was an interest in creating affordable, sanitary and comfortable accommodations solely for women – an alternative to tenement housing that would also protect against discrimination on the basis of nationality or religion. In 1909, the Junior League erected a six-story building on the corner of 78th street and East End Avenue, which would serve as the Junior League Hotel until its closure in 1931. At a rate of $4 to $7 a week, residents were provided a range of amenities including a library, roof garden, laundry, and tennis and basketball courts. The Junior League Hotel served as a model for Junior Leagues in other cities, many of which sponsored their own residential hotels and services for working women (100 Years, 21).

As Junior Leagues began to crop up in cities across the United States during the 1910’s, the organization restated its mission with a focus on bolstering “an interest in all kinds of charitable and social effort” among its members, as well as supporting “already organized philanthropies” (100 Years, 27). This wide-ranging agenda would go on to encompass volunteering efforts around the country related to education, voting rights, child welfare and historic preservation, among other areas.

Education Reform edit

Over the early years of the League’s development, education emerged as a central aspect of the organization’s efforts to advance social causes. Through the School and Home Visitors program, the League sponsored teachers to assist with bolstering communication between schools and immigrant parents, and by 1909, the League was supplying schools with visiting teachers and volunteer tutors (100 Years, 23). School and Home Visitors, which began as a pilot project, was ultimately so successful that in 1910, New York state absorbed responsibility for the program and expanded its funding and reach. Nathalie Henderson, a League co-founder and chair of the organization’s Committee on Visiting Teachers of the Public Education Society, went on to chair New York’s joint Committee for Education and serve as a trustee at Teachers College, Columbia University (100 Years, 24).

When a League was organized in Brooklyn in 1910, the members petitioned the Board of Education to provide free lunches in public schools and transform vacant lots into playgrounds (100 Years, 26).

This advocacy worked continued after World War II, when the Baby Boom created an additional need for resources to support schools, playgrounds, and teachers. With a shortage of teachers, League members volunteered in diagnostic programs and those for gifted and challenged children. By the mid-1950s, over 100 Leagues established public play areas for children (100 Years, 104).

In the 1980’s, the Junior League participated in and led several campaigns for literacy. Along with other national organizations, the League joined in PLUS (Project Literacy US), a coordinated effort to expand literacy as a way of preventing against the spread of homelessness (100 Years, 140). Later that decade, First Ladies of the United States and Junior League members Barbara Bush and Laura Bush founded The Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy. The Foundation granted over $6 million to more than 200 Family Literacy Programs across the country in its first decade of operations. Laura Bush spearheaded an initiative in early childhood development to help infants and children get a leg up on reading before entering school (100 Years, 144).

Suffrage movement edit

In 1914, the St. Louis Junior League mobilized to support women’s suffrage. They staged a demonstration – what the St. Louis women referred to as a “walkless, talkless parade” - at the 1916 Democratic National Convention, which ultimately resulted in the Democrats voting to include a plank for women's suffrage. The St. Louis League expressed their support in various ways, including reforming the organization as The League of Women Voters, a new group (100 Years, 36).

One year after Congress passed the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the Junior League held its annual conference in St. Louis. With discussions swirling around women’s suffrage at the conference, the League decided to form Legislative committees that would focus on “city or state laws, especially those affecting the social welfare of women and children” (100 Years, 37).

Child welfare edit

Junior Leagues have historically advanced causes related to the well-being of women and children in various ways. Leagues across the country pioneered these efforts. Tucson, Arizona established the city’s first day nursery, and Cincinnati established the Junior League Welfare Station, a clinic created to care for the children of indigent families (100 Years, 50). In 1917, members of the New York League organized the first network of volunteers in an outpatient department in New York City through the Children’s Clinic at Bellevue Hospital (100 Years, 38).

During the Great Depression, Junior Leagues vamped up efforts to care for infants, children and families in need. Junior Leagues established and operated milk stations and nurseries for the children of working women, and also ran soup kitchens (100 Years, 65). The Tampa Junior League supported and built out a tuberculosis clinic and treatment center known as the Pine Health Preventorium, through which it provided assistance to 150 children between 1933-34 (100 Years, 65).

Childhood immunization edit

In the wake of the 1952 polio epidemic, the Junior League played a critical role in promoting the use of the polio vaccine, discovered by Dr. Jonas Salk, and for advocating for the rehabilitation of polio patients. In recognition for its efforts, the League received the March of Dimes Service Award in 1957 (100 Years, 101).

In the 1990’s, the Junior League played a pivotal role in advocating for children to have greater access to health care. In 1991, the League launched Don’t Wait to Vaccinate, a public awareness campaign focused on encouraging early childhood immunization (100 Years, 11). All 276 Leagues joined in to distribute information about the importance of vaccination, utilizing multilingual radio announcements, billboards, and handouts to spread the message. Along with these efforts, the Leagues tackled problem areas such as the lack of health clinics, insurance and language barriers that they recognized as factors in preventing wider-spread immunization (100 Years, 101). To eliminate these barriers, Leagues identified the issues that were most relevant to their own local populations and then deployed educational materials and collaborated with health agencies and other Leagues to create effective children’s health programs (100 Years, 161). The success of the Don’t Wait campaign garnered wide-spread attention – President George Bush called the program “a point of light” (100 Years, 166).

Public Policy & Advocacy edit

Despite the Women’s Suffrage movement fueling the establishment of a number of Junior Leagues, the official stance on engaging in public policy efforts for the Association in the early 20th century was to avoid any partisan issues and stay away from public arena (Volunteering, 97-98). The official position of the Association was to focus League energies towards their purpose of fostering interest among their members in the social, economic, educational, cultural and civic conditions of their own communities and to make efficient their volunteer service (this is quoted in Volunteering, 97 but is cited from AJLA Yearbooks https://archives.lib.umn.edu/repositories/11/archival_objects/490625). The 1930s were rife with disagreements on this issue and eventually a shaky agreement evolved where Leagues could act on public issues locally (Volunteer, 100), however, this would continue to cause debate at League Annual Conferences. Early on Leagues began to form State Public Affairs Committees (SPAC) where Leagues within a state would cooperate on

PACs (Public Affairs Committees), SPACs (State Public Affairs Committees) and LICs (Legislative Issues Committees) are individual, apolitical Junior Leagues or coalitions of Junior Leagues within a state that form to educate and take action on public policy issues relevant to The Junior League Mission. Having begun to take shape in the 1930s, they are collectively governed by their member Leagues and the methods by which they operate vary by state, as do the issues chosen for study and action.[7]

Children’s Theaters, Puppetry edit

Junior Leagues played an important role in spreading children’s theater across the United States, both as a form of community service for League members and as way of introducing live-performance to children who might not have experienced it otherwise. The Junior League of Chicago was the first to stage children’s theater in 1921, and by 1929, it hosted “America’s first conference on children’s theater” (100 Years, 57). Following the conference, the Junior League of Chicago produced a national tour of The Blue Bird by Maurice Maeterlinck, which was staged in 15 cities and seen by 35,000 children.

While children’s theater started in Chicago, it quickly spread to Leagues across the country. By 1931, children’s plays were staged by 80 Leagues, and almost all of the 148 Leagues put on some form of children’s theater, marionette or puppet shows by 1938. The Junior League of Chicago even had a presence at the Chicago’s World Fair where they presented weekly shows over a four-month run (100 Years, 57).

As children’s theater grew into a national movement, it eventually evolved into other mediums like radio and television as well. The popular children’s television show Kukla, Fran and Ollie originated from puppet shows staged in Chicago by Burr Tillstrom and the Junior League in the 1940’s (100 Years, 59). Fred Rogers’ daily television program The Children’s Corner was developed with help from the League, and Margaret Hamilton, who would go on to play the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz, got her start in children’s theater as a member of the Junior League (100 Years, 60).

In addition to providing enriching entertainment, Leagues were also cognizant of the comfort that theater could bring to children during times of uncertainty. From 1944-45, Leagues put on 783 theater performances for nearly 370,000 children. And in the last year of the second World War, Leagues staged 36 live radio programs for children (100 Years, 87).

Children’s Museums and Science Museums edit

Script and Lists to get started

As was the case of children’s theatre, Junior Leagues were also instrumental in opening children’s museums to help expose children to science and technology, art and nature. By the end of the 1950’s, Leagues across the country – from San Francisco to Jacksonville, Florida – established or entered into partnerships to open up museums for children in their own communities (100 Years, 102). The Denver Junior League was the first to open a children’s museum in 1945. Co-sponsored by the Denver Art Museum, the Denver Children’s Museum was such a success that its opening weekend brought in 10,000 visitors. Ultimately the museum served as a pilot project, both for the nation and for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) (100 Years, 103).

Many other Leagues followed the example set by the Denver Children’s Museum. In 1950, the Junior League of Miami opened the Junior Museum of Miami, a small house that brought in more 2,000 children in its first three months and eventually evolved into the Miami Museum of Science. League members also mobilized to secure funds and necessary resources for children’s museums. In 1946, the Junior League of Charlotte stepped in to save a small but popular Children’s Nature Museum thought up by a local school teacher from financial ruin. The League staged a fashion show, barbershop quartet, and follies to raise funds, eventually securing enough resources to take over an abandoned day nursery for a nature center. By 1951, the League pitched in to help the museum move into a larger, $68,000 building (100 Years, 103).

In addition to opening new museums, Leagues also worked with existing museums to support children-friendly sections. This was the case for the “Please Touch” Gallery at the Museum of the City of New York, which was staffed by volunteers and financed by the League (100 Years, 103).

Beyond the 1950’s, the Leagues continued to meet the needs of communities around the country by opening children’s museums. In 1976, the Junior League of Pittsburgh contributed to the founding of the Pittsburgh Children’s Museum, and in 1982, the Junior League of Chicago organized around fighting cutbacks in funding for the city’s public schools by helping to establish the Chicago Children’s Museum.[8]

In 1961, the Junior League of Chicago co-founded the Art Institute's volunteer Docent Program to revitalize and expand "programming for children."[9]

In 2017, the Association of Children’s Museums granted the 2017 ACM Great Friend to Kids Award to the Junior League in recognition of the organization’s contributions to advocating for children and their education and for their work developing children’s museums.

World War Efforts edit

When World War I broke out in Europe in 1914, the Junior League of Montreal was the first to spring into action, initially by raising money for refugees. Almost all Leagues in the U.S. became involved by 1916, despite the nation’s stated neutrality which lasted until April 1917 (timeline). In addition to fundraising efforts, Leagues organized classes, including those focused on home nursing, as well as “preparedness” initiatives that were often organized in coordination with the Red Cross (100 Years, 39).

Perhaps even more so than the first world war, World War II galvanized Junior Leagues into action. In July 1940, as awareness spread that the United States would join the war, the AJLA called a special meeting to mobilize all Leagues in the United States to form central volunteer bureaus. This movement built off of capabilities already developed during the Depression that matched volunteers with agencies in need of help. In August 1941, all Leagues were sent a plan for organizing community volunteer initiatives entitled “A Central Volunteer Bureau in Defense," a plan for coordinating community volunteer efforts (100 Years, 80).

In the United States and Canada, volunteer efforts for the war took on many different forms. Junior League members organized blood drives, worked for the Red Cross, volunteered in daycare centers, sold US Treasury War Bonds and Stamps, and performed for servicemen at the USO and other venues (100 Years, 86). Overseas, League Members volunteered with various organizations, including an 125-person unit of Junior League Members who served with the YMCA in France (100 Years, 80).

As volunteerism flourished, Junior League members also took on more official responsibilities in war efforts. It was through the work of Oveta Culp Hobby, member of the Houston Junior League and Director of the Women’s Interest Section of the War Department, that the Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC) was formed in 1941. After President Roosevelt signed the bill establishing the WAAC, Hobby was promoted to Major Hobby. As director, Major Hobby was charged with mobilizing and training women to be soldiers, and, “making available to the national defense the knowledge, skill, and special training of the women of the nation" (100 Years, 84).

The WAACs under Major Hobby’s charge initially took on roles ranging from clerks and secretaries to aircraft warning observers. However, as the war progressed, WAACs assumed a broader range of primarily communication and clerical responsibilities overseas. By 1943, the initiative had garnered such success that the WAAC was elevated to Regular Army and afforded pay and privileges equal to what was granted to male soldiers (100 Years, 85).

Women's organization edit

The League is an all-women organization. In 1996, the Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, and San Francisco Gate publicized that a male hairdresser named Clark Clementsen tried to join the League after his "high society clients" recommended him, but was denied membership and retained an attorney to argue his case at a meeting of AJLI representatives in NYC. For him, members had "been trained to be organized, articulate community leaders, and it showed...no men's organization even came close."[10][11][12][13]

Development edit

Mission edit

"The Association of Junior Leagues International, Inc. (AJLI) is an organization of women whose mission is to advance women's leadership for meaningful community impact through volunteer action, collaboration, and training. Its purpose is exclusively educational and charitable."

Chartered Leagues edit

As of 2023 there are 296 Leagues of 140,000 women in the United States, Canada, Mexico, the UK, and Kenya.[14] including but not limited to:

Arizona

  • Junior League of Phoenix
  • Junior League of Tucson

California

  • Junior League of San Francisco[15]

Canada

  • Junior League of Montreal—the first League outside of the U.S.
  • Junior League of Toronto
  • Junior League of Hamilton-Burlington

Florida

  • Junior League of Jacksonville
  • Junior League of Indian River [16]
  • Junior League of Orlando
  • Junior League of Manatee County
  • Junior League of Miami
  • Junior League of Sarasota
  • Junior League of Tampa
  • Junior League of Clearwater Dunedin
  • Junior League of St. Petersburg

Illinois

  • Junior League of Evanston-North Shore [17]

Massachusetts

Mississippi

  • Junior League of Jackson—featured in The Help book and film

New York

  • Junior League of Buffalo
  • New York Junior League—the first league
  • Junior League of Kingston
  • Junior League of Long Island
  • Junior League of Schenectady and Saratoga Counties
  • Junior League of Pelham

New Jersey

  • Junior League of Princeton
  • Junior League of Summit[18]

North Carolina

  • Junior League of Raleigh
  • Junior League of Greensboro
  • Junior League of Winston-Salem [19]
  • Junior League of Charlotte
  • Junior League of Durham and Orange Counties

Ohio

  • Junior League of Akron
  • Junior League of Cleveland
  • Junior League of Cincinnati
  • Junior League of Columbus
  • Junior League of Dayton
  • Junior League of Toledo

Oregon

  • Junior League of Portland

Pennsylvania

  • Junior League of Philadelphia

Texas

  • Junior League of Houston

Utah

  • Junior League of Salt Lake City
  • Junior League of Ogden

Virginia

  • Junior League of Hampton Roads
  • Junior League of Norfolk-Virginia Beach

Washington

  • Junior League of Lower Columbia
  • Junior League of Olympia[20]
  • Junior League of Seattle
  • Junior League of Spokane
  • Junior League of Tacoma

Wisconsin

  • Junior League of Eau Claire[21]
  • Junior League of Madison[22]
  • Junior League of Milwaukee[23]
  • Junior League of Racine[24]

UK

  • Junior League of London

Membership edit

Members of The Junior League obtain invaluable skills and experiences that empower them to punch above their weight as leaders in their local communities and beyond. Here are a few of the areas in which they acquire skills or knowledge: Leadership, Organizational development, Community needs assessment, Mentoring, Advocacy, Communications, Fund development, Strategic planning, Negotiation, Consensus-building, and Networking

Fundraisers and advocacy edit

The Junior League has a full calendar year of members-only, family-friendly, and public events at their clubhouses and local venues such as hotels. Notable JL events raising money for partner community organizations related to foster children, domestic violence, human trafficking, illiteracy, city beautification, and other issues include, but are not limited to:

The New York Junior League used to have a thrift shop where proceeds went to the community organizations.

Other JL initiatives include its contributions to the passage of the Clean Water Act, free school lunch campaign, “Don’t Wait to Vaccinate” campaign, and The Junior Leagues’ Kids in the Kitchen initiative, which combats childhood obesity and educates families on health and nutrition.[34]

Notable League members and alums edit

As of 2020, five first ladies of the U.S. have been Junior League members.

Politics and government

Business

Entertainment, media, literature, and fashion

Military

Nonprofit and philanthropy

Sports

In popular culture edit

  • Five and Ten (1931 film) Marion Davies is shown volunteering at a Junior League Charity Bazaar.
  • The Official Preppy Handbook—1980 tongue-in-cheek reference guide book featuring the Junior League
  • She's the Man (2006 film) Viola and Olivia are seen taking part in a Junior League carnival.
  • The Help (2009) book and The Help (2011 film)—the film stars Emma Stone and Bryce Dallas Howard in the Junior League of Jackson, Mississippi
  • The Devil in the Junior League—2006 novel written by a former Junior Leaguer[37][38] originally set to star Jennifer Garner in the film version.[39]
  • Gilmore Girls TV series character Lorelai Gilmore stated she wore an inappropriate T-Shirt to the Junior League Spring Tea. [40]
  • In Gossip Girl TV Season 1, Episode 10 "Hi, Society," character Serena Van Der Woodsen questions her mother's introduction for her debut, "Serena van der Woodsen wants to work for the Junior League and have two children?"
  • Mad Men TV series character Betty Draper is a member of the Junior League.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "AJLI FY 2018-2019 Financial Statement" (PDF). AJLI. 2019.
  2. ^ "Who We Are". AJLI. from the original on 2023-04-04. Retrieved 2024-01-20.
  3. ^ Mitchell, Donn (2008). "Debutantes of the World: Unite! The Irrespressible Mary Harriman". The Anglican Examiner Presents The New York Anglicans: Twenty Who Shaped the Twentieth Century. The Anglican Examiner. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  4. ^ a b "The New York Junior League Throughout the Years". The New York Junior League. 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  5. ^ a b "The New York Junior League Throughout the Years". The New York Junior League. 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  6. ^ a b Gray, Christopher (5 December 1999). "Streetscapes/Readers' Questions; Junior League, Garden Co-op and Pumpkin House". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  7. ^ "State Public Affairs Committees (SPAC)". AJLI. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
  8. ^ "Association of Children's Museums Says 'Thanks' to The Junior League". AJLI. 2017-05-08. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
  9. ^ . Learn with Us. The Art Institute Chicago. Archived from the original on 21 March 2020. Retrieved 12 October 2021. Volunteerism surged in the United States in the postwar period […] In this context, the Art Institute's [...] to create the museum's Docent Program in 1961 with the Junior League of Chicago as a means of revitalizing and expanding programming for children
  10. ^ Prodis, Julia (January 28, 1996). "Man Battles Junior League Over Policy of Admitting Only Women". Los Angeles Times.
  11. ^ Boudreau, John (March 16, 1996). "CALIFORNIA HAIRDRESSER IN A LEAGUE OF HIS OWN". The Washington Post.
  12. ^ "STIFF LIPS". Chicago Tribune. February 15, 1996.
  13. ^ Simon, Mark (January 31, 1996). "San Jose Man Rebuffed by Junior League". San Francisco Gate.
  14. ^ "The Association of Junior Leagues International Civic Leadership Development for Women". www.ajli.org. Retrieved 2016-06-20.
  15. ^ Junior League of San Francisco
  16. ^ Junior League of Indian River
  17. ^ Junior League of Evanston-North Shore
  18. ^ https://summit.jl.org/
  19. ^ Junior League of Winston-Salem
  20. ^ Junior League of Olympia
  21. ^ Junior League of Eau Claire
  22. ^ Junior League of Madison
  23. ^ Junior League of Milwaukee
  24. ^ Junior League of Racine
  25. ^ "New York Junior League's 59th Annual Winter Ball". Hamptons.com. February 21, 2011. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  26. ^ Maggie Maloney (March 8, 2018). "Inside the New York Junior League's 66th Annual Winter Ball". Town & Country. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  27. ^ "Inside The New York Junior League's 63rd Annual Winter Ball". Guest of a Guest. March 2, 2015. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  28. ^ Stephanie Cohen (December 26, 2010). "Glove affair". New York Post. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  29. ^ "What's a Deb to Do in Hard Times? Go to the Ball?". New York Times. December 16, 1990. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  30. ^ "Junior League Will Introduce. 62 Debutantes". New York Times. September 29, 1964. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  31. ^ "Junior League Debutante Ball Held at the Plaza; Thanksgiving Week Parties Begin With Gala Benefit". New York Times. November 26, 1959. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  32. ^ Mollie Chen (May 2, 2002). "Welcome to the Ball". Harvard Crimson. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  33. ^ "New York Junior League Events". New York Junior League. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  34. ^ "AJLI: WHAT WE DO". AJLI. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  35. ^ "Ethma Ewing Odum, March 22, 2009". Alexandria Town Talk. Archived from the original on June 2, 2014. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  36. ^ "Charities". 21 March 2016.
  37. ^ Mia Geiger (October 12, 2006). "Ex-Junior Leaguer knows her characters". Denver Post. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  38. ^ Jeannie Kever (September 10, 2006). "Texas writer takes on the Junior League". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  39. ^ "Jennifer Garner Is the Devil in the Junior League". Movie Web. February 13, 2007. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  40. ^ "Gilmore Girls Quotes". IMDb.

External links edit

  • Association of Junior Leagues International
  • New York Junior League
  • Canadian Federation of Junior Leagues
  • Junior League of London
  • Junior League of the City of New York Survey of Significant Interiors, 1984-1985. Held by the Department of Drawings & Archives, Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University.

junior, league, this, article, about, women, organization, baseball, division, baseball, professional, wrestling, tournament, ajpw, association, international, private, nonprofit, educational, women, volunteer, organization, aimed, improving, communities, soci. This article is about the women s organization For the baseball division see Junior League Baseball For the professional wrestling tournament see AJPW Junior League The Association of Junior Leagues International Inc Junior League or JL is a private nonprofit educational women s volunteer organization aimed at improving communities and the social cultural and political fabric of civil society With 295 Junior League chapters in the United States Canada Mexico and the United Kingdom as of 2023 2 it is one of the oldest and largest of its kind clarification needed Members engage in developing civic leadership skills fundraising and volunteering on JL committees to support partner community organizations related to foster children domestic violence human trafficking illiteracy city beautification and other issues Its mission is to advance women s leadership through meaningful community impact through volunteer action collaboration and training Junior LeagueJunior League members sell flowers in 1900 PredecessorJunior League for the Promotion of the Settlement Movement New York Junior LeagueFormation1901 123 years ago 1901 New York NY U S FounderMary Harriman RumseyTypePrivate 501 c 3 nonprofitRegistration no 13 1656639Headquarters80 Maiden LaneNew York NY 10038Membership140 000 womenKey peopleDorothy Payne Whitney First President AJLI Laurel Lee Alexander President Subsidiaries291 Junior League chaptersRevenue 7 195 946 FY 2019 1 Expenses 7 035 466 FY 2019 1 inc direct program support as all members serve as unpaid volunteersWebsiteajli wbr orgIt was founded in 1901 in New York City by Barnard College debutante Mary Harriman Rumsey Contents 1 History 1 1 Legacy of Voluntarism 1 2 Education Reform 1 3 Suffrage movement 1 4 Child welfare 1 5 Childhood immunization 1 6 Public Policy amp Advocacy 1 7 Children s Theaters Puppetry 1 8 Children s Museums and Science Museums 1 9 World War Efforts 1 10 Women s organization 2 Development 2 1 Mission 2 2 Chartered Leagues 2 3 Membership 2 4 Fundraisers and advocacy 3 Notable League members and alums 4 In popular culture 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Astor House clubhouse owned by the New York Junior League the first League Upper East SideThe first Junior League was founded in 1901 in New York City as the Junior League for the Promotion of the Settlement Movement This original chapter is now known as the New York Junior League NYJL Its founder was then 19 year old Barnard College student and debutante Mary Harriman Rumsey sister of future Governor of New York W Averell Harriman and daughter of railroad executive Edward H Harriman 3 4 Inspired by a lecture on settlement movements that chronicled the works of social reformers such as Lillian Wald and Jane Addams Harriman Rumsey organized others to become involved in settlement work The organization s first project was working at the College Settlement on Rivington Street on Manhattan s Lower East Side These were the early days of privileged young girls and women leaving their sheltered lives in wealthy neighborhoods to volunteer their time with those who lived in crowded poverty stricken areas of cities This started a legacy of volunteering and social activism that would continue for many decades For many years the NYJL s clubhouse was located at 221 East 71st Street in Manhattan Designed by architect John Russell Pope and opened in 1929 the building contained a swimming pool on the top floor bedrooms for volunteers a ballroom a hairdressing salon and a shelter for up to 20 abandoned babies 5 6 Marymount Manhattan College currently owns the building 6 In 1950 the NYJL clubhouse moved to the former Vincent Astor townhouse Astor House at 130 East 80th Street where it remains as of 2020 5 The League quickly branched out and in 1907 became the Junior League for the Promotion of Neighborhood Work Under President Dorothy Whitney the League introduced formal training on social problems and expanded the scope of their work to include civic issues such as the civic role for women police and immigration 100 Years 25 26 During this time a number of sister leagues formed in cities including Brooklyn New York and Portland Oregon although there was no formal affiliation with the first New York league A number of other debutante circles like the Sewing Circle League of Boston began to emulate the League in New York and focus on local social issues 100 Years 26 Eleanor Roosevelt was an early member of the NYJL joining in 1903 when she was 19 years old 4 In 1921 thirty Leagues joined to form a national association Until this point Leagues were only connected by a Bulletin containing updates about various leagues and an annual conference The national association was named the Association of Junior Leagues of America Inc and acted as an umbrella organization Volunteer 61 A new Constitution was written and the Board was tasked with acting as an information bureau for the leagues as well as continuing to publish the Bulletin and coordinating the annual meeting 100 Years 47 After serving as New York City s Junior League president from 1907 to 1910 Dorothy Payne Whitney was nominated as the first president of AJLA Despite the name there was membership of Leagues located both in America and Canada at the time of the incorporation 100 Years 61 AJLA continued to expand in the number of Leagues and in programming By the middle of the 20th century there were over 150 Junior Leagues located in the United States Canada and Mexico 100 Years 10 There was also a noticeable demographic shift in League members More and more league members were young working women or were older suburban housewives as opposed to debutantes 100 Years 94 In 1985 a Junior League was established in London which was the first League established outside of North America 100 Years 154 155 This prompted a name change with the organization official becoming the Association of Junior Leagues International Inc History Timeline Legacy of Voluntarism edit The idea that women can meaningfully contribute to solving social issues and bettering communities through voluntarism has been a core tenet of the Junior League since its conception In the Junior League s 1906 Annual Report Harriman Rumsey emphasized the organization s imperative to alleviate civic ills It seems almost inhuman that we should live so close to suffering and poverty within a few blocks of our own home and bear no part in this great life 100 Years Introduction This altruistic spirit inspired Harriman Rumsey to organize a group of 80 young women to volunteer for the College Settlement on Rivington Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan Every week League members would teach classes hand out library books and engage in other enriching activities for children at the settlement house Eleanor Roosevelt who joined the Junior League in 1903 and served as League secretary in 1904 also taught dance and calisthenic classes at the Rivington Street Settlement House 100 Years 21 The Junior League House for Working Girls Junior League Hotel grew out of the organization s early volunteer work with settlement movements Dorothy Payne Whitney president of the New York League from 1907 to 1909 and League members began to engage in conversations around how they might best support working women in the city There was an interest in creating affordable sanitary and comfortable accommodations solely for women an alternative to tenement housing that would also protect against discrimination on the basis of nationality or religion In 1909 the Junior League erected a six story building on the corner of 78th street and East End Avenue which would serve as the Junior League Hotel until its closure in 1931 At a rate of 4 to 7 a week residents were provided a range of amenities including a library roof garden laundry and tennis and basketball courts The Junior League Hotel served as a model for Junior Leagues in other cities many of which sponsored their own residential hotels and services for working women 100 Years 21 As Junior Leagues began to crop up in cities across the United States during the 1910 s the organization restated its mission with a focus on bolstering an interest in all kinds of charitable and social effort among its members as well as supporting already organized philanthropies 100 Years 27 This wide ranging agenda would go on to encompass volunteering efforts around the country related to education voting rights child welfare and historic preservation among other areas Education Reform edit Over the early years of the League s development education emerged as a central aspect of the organization s efforts to advance social causes Through the School and Home Visitors program the League sponsored teachers to assist with bolstering communication between schools and immigrant parents and by 1909 the League was supplying schools with visiting teachers and volunteer tutors 100 Years 23 School and Home Visitors which began as a pilot project was ultimately so successful that in 1910 New York state absorbed responsibility for the program and expanded its funding and reach Nathalie Henderson a League co founder and chair of the organization s Committee on Visiting Teachers of the Public Education Society went on to chair New York s joint Committee for Education and serve as a trustee at Teachers College Columbia University 100 Years 24 When a League was organized in Brooklyn in 1910 the members petitioned the Board of Education to provide free lunches in public schools and transform vacant lots into playgrounds 100 Years 26 This advocacy worked continued after World War II when the Baby Boom created an additional need for resources to support schools playgrounds and teachers With a shortage of teachers League members volunteered in diagnostic programs and those for gifted and challenged children By the mid 1950s over 100 Leagues established public play areas for children 100 Years 104 In the 1980 s the Junior League participated in and led several campaigns for literacy Along with other national organizations the League joined in PLUS Project Literacy US a coordinated effort to expand literacy as a way of preventing against the spread of homelessness 100 Years 140 Later that decade First Ladies of the United States and Junior League members Barbara Bush and Laura Bush founded The Barbara Bush Foundation for Family Literacy The Foundation granted over 6 million to more than 200 Family Literacy Programs across the country in its first decade of operations Laura Bush spearheaded an initiative in early childhood development to help infants and children get a leg up on reading before entering school 100 Years 144 Suffrage movement edit In 1914 the St Louis Junior League mobilized to support women s suffrage They staged a demonstration what the St Louis women referred to as a walkless talkless parade at the 1916 Democratic National Convention which ultimately resulted in the Democrats voting to include a plank for women s suffrage The St Louis League expressed their support in various ways including reforming the organization as The League of Women Voters a new group 100 Years 36 One year after Congress passed the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution the Junior League held its annual conference in St Louis With discussions swirling around women s suffrage at the conference the League decided to form Legislative committees that would focus on city or state laws especially those affecting the social welfare of women and children 100 Years 37 Child welfare edit Junior Leagues have historically advanced causes related to the well being of women and children in various ways Leagues across the country pioneered these efforts Tucson Arizona established the city s first day nursery and Cincinnati established the Junior League Welfare Station a clinic created to care for the children of indigent families 100 Years 50 In 1917 members of the New York League organized the first network of volunteers in an outpatient department in New York City through the Children s Clinic at Bellevue Hospital 100 Years 38 During the Great Depression Junior Leagues vamped up efforts to care for infants children and families in need Junior Leagues established and operated milk stations and nurseries for the children of working women and also ran soup kitchens 100 Years 65 The Tampa Junior League supported and built out a tuberculosis clinic and treatment center known as the Pine Health Preventorium through which it provided assistance to 150 children between 1933 34 100 Years 65 Childhood immunization edit In the wake of the 1952 polio epidemic the Junior League played a critical role in promoting the use of the polio vaccine discovered by Dr Jonas Salk and for advocating for the rehabilitation of polio patients In recognition for its efforts the League received the March of Dimes Service Award in 1957 100 Years 101 In the 1990 s the Junior League played a pivotal role in advocating for children to have greater access to health care In 1991 the League launched Don t Wait to Vaccinate a public awareness campaign focused on encouraging early childhood immunization 100 Years 11 All 276 Leagues joined in to distribute information about the importance of vaccination utilizing multilingual radio announcements billboards and handouts to spread the message Along with these efforts the Leagues tackled problem areas such as the lack of health clinics insurance and language barriers that they recognized as factors in preventing wider spread immunization 100 Years 101 To eliminate these barriers Leagues identified the issues that were most relevant to their own local populations and then deployed educational materials and collaborated with health agencies and other Leagues to create effective children s health programs 100 Years 161 The success of the Don t Wait campaign garnered wide spread attention President George Bush called the program a point of light 100 Years 166 Public Policy amp Advocacy edit Despite the Women s Suffrage movement fueling the establishment of a number of Junior Leagues the official stance on engaging in public policy efforts for the Association in the early 20th century was to avoid any partisan issues and stay away from public arena Volunteering 97 98 The official position of the Association was to focus League energies towards their purpose of fostering interest among their members in the social economic educational cultural and civic conditions of their own communities and to make efficient their volunteer service this is quoted in Volunteering 97 but is cited from AJLA Yearbooks https archives lib umn edu repositories 11 archival objects 490625 The 1930s were rife with disagreements on this issue and eventually a shaky agreement evolved where Leagues could act on public issues locally Volunteer 100 however this would continue to cause debate at League Annual Conferences Early on Leagues began to form State Public Affairs Committees SPAC where Leagues within a state would cooperate onPACs Public Affairs Committees SPACs State Public Affairs Committees and LICs Legislative Issues Committees are individual apolitical Junior Leagues or coalitions of Junior Leagues within a state that form to educate and take action on public policy issues relevant to The Junior League Mission Having begun to take shape in the 1930s they are collectively governed by their member Leagues and the methods by which they operate vary by state as do the issues chosen for study and action 7 Children s Theaters Puppetry edit Junior Leagues played an important role in spreading children s theater across the United States both as a form of community service for League members and as way of introducing live performance to children who might not have experienced it otherwise The Junior League of Chicago was the first to stage children s theater in 1921 and by 1929 it hosted America s first conference on children s theater 100 Years 57 Following the conference the Junior League of Chicago produced a national tour of The Blue Bird by Maurice Maeterlinck which was staged in 15 cities and seen by 35 000 children While children s theater started in Chicago it quickly spread to Leagues across the country By 1931 children s plays were staged by 80 Leagues and almost all of the 148 Leagues put on some form of children s theater marionette or puppet shows by 1938 The Junior League of Chicago even had a presence at the Chicago s World Fair where they presented weekly shows over a four month run 100 Years 57 As children s theater grew into a national movement it eventually evolved into other mediums like radio and television as well The popular children s television show Kukla Fran and Ollie originated from puppet shows staged in Chicago by Burr Tillstrom and the Junior League in the 1940 s 100 Years 59 Fred Rogers daily television program The Children s Corner was developed with help from the League and Margaret Hamilton who would go on to play the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz got her start in children s theater as a member of the Junior League 100 Years 60 In addition to providing enriching entertainment Leagues were also cognizant of the comfort that theater could bring to children during times of uncertainty From 1944 45 Leagues put on 783 theater performances for nearly 370 000 children And in the last year of the second World War Leagues staged 36 live radio programs for children 100 Years 87 Children s Museums and Science Museums edit Script and Lists to get startedAs was the case of children s theatre Junior Leagues were also instrumental in opening children s museums to help expose children to science and technology art and nature By the end of the 1950 s Leagues across the country from San Francisco to Jacksonville Florida established or entered into partnerships to open up museums for children in their own communities 100 Years 102 The Denver Junior League was the first to open a children s museum in 1945 Co sponsored by the Denver Art Museum the Denver Children s Museum was such a success that its opening weekend brought in 10 000 visitors Ultimately the museum served as a pilot project both for the nation and for the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO 100 Years 103 Many other Leagues followed the example set by the Denver Children s Museum In 1950 the Junior League of Miami opened the Junior Museum of Miami a small house that brought in more 2 000 children in its first three months and eventually evolved into the Miami Museum of Science League members also mobilized to secure funds and necessary resources for children s museums In 1946 the Junior League of Charlotte stepped in to save a small but popular Children s Nature Museum thought up by a local school teacher from financial ruin The League staged a fashion show barbershop quartet and follies to raise funds eventually securing enough resources to take over an abandoned day nursery for a nature center By 1951 the League pitched in to help the museum move into a larger 68 000 building 100 Years 103 In addition to opening new museums Leagues also worked with existing museums to support children friendly sections This was the case for the Please Touch Gallery at the Museum of the City of New York which was staffed by volunteers and financed by the League 100 Years 103 Beyond the 1950 s the Leagues continued to meet the needs of communities around the country by opening children s museums In 1976 the Junior League of Pittsburgh contributed to the founding of the Pittsburgh Children s Museum and in 1982 the Junior League of Chicago organized around fighting cutbacks in funding for the city s public schools by helping to establish the Chicago Children s Museum 8 In 1961 the Junior League of Chicago co founded the Art Institute s volunteer Docent Program to revitalize and expand programming for children 9 In 2017 the Association of Children s Museums granted the 2017 ACM Great Friend to Kids Award to the Junior League in recognition of the organization s contributions to advocating for children and their education and for their work developing children s museums World War Efforts edit When World War I broke out in Europe in 1914 the Junior League of Montreal was the first to spring into action initially by raising money for refugees Almost all Leagues in the U S became involved by 1916 despite the nation s stated neutrality which lasted until April 1917 timeline In addition to fundraising efforts Leagues organized classes including those focused on home nursing as well as preparedness initiatives that were often organized in coordination with the Red Cross 100 Years 39 Perhaps even more so than the first world war World War II galvanized Junior Leagues into action In July 1940 as awareness spread that the United States would join the war the AJLA called a special meeting to mobilize all Leagues in the United States to form central volunteer bureaus This movement built off of capabilities already developed during the Depression that matched volunteers with agencies in need of help In August 1941 all Leagues were sent a plan for organizing community volunteer initiatives entitled A Central Volunteer Bureau in Defense a plan for coordinating community volunteer efforts 100 Years 80 In the United States and Canada volunteer efforts for the war took on many different forms Junior League members organized blood drives worked for the Red Cross volunteered in daycare centers sold US Treasury War Bonds and Stamps and performed for servicemen at the USO and other venues 100 Years 86 Overseas League Members volunteered with various organizations including an 125 person unit of Junior League Members who served with the YMCA in France 100 Years 80 As volunteerism flourished Junior League members also took on more official responsibilities in war efforts It was through the work of Oveta Culp Hobby member of the Houston Junior League and Director of the Women s Interest Section of the War Department that the Women s Auxiliary Army Corps WAAC was formed in 1941 After President Roosevelt signed the bill establishing the WAAC Hobby was promoted to Major Hobby As director Major Hobby was charged with mobilizing and training women to be soldiers and making available to the national defense the knowledge skill and special training of the women of the nation 100 Years 84 The WAACs under Major Hobby s charge initially took on roles ranging from clerks and secretaries to aircraft warning observers However as the war progressed WAACs assumed a broader range of primarily communication and clerical responsibilities overseas By 1943 the initiative had garnered such success that the WAAC was elevated to Regular Army and afforded pay and privileges equal to what was granted to male soldiers 100 Years 85 Women s organization edit The League is an all women organization In 1996 the Los Angeles Times The Washington Post Chicago Tribune and San Francisco Gate publicized that a male hairdresser named Clark Clementsen tried to join the League after his high society clients recommended him but was denied membership and retained an attorney to argue his case at a meeting of AJLI representatives in NYC For him members had been trained to be organized articulate community leaders and it showed no men s organization even came close 10 11 12 13 Development editMission edit The Association of Junior Leagues International Inc AJLI is an organization of women whose mission is to advance women s leadership for meaningful community impact through volunteer action collaboration and training Its purpose is exclusively educational and charitable Chartered Leagues edit As of 2023 there are 296 Leagues of 140 000 women in the United States Canada Mexico the UK and Kenya 14 including but not limited to Arizona Junior League of Phoenix Junior League of TucsonCalifornia Junior League of San Francisco 15 Canada Junior League of Montreal the first League outside of the U S Junior League of Toronto Junior League of Hamilton BurlingtonFlorida Junior League of Jacksonville Junior League of Indian River 16 Junior League of Orlando Junior League of Manatee County Junior League of Miami Junior League of Sarasota Junior League of Tampa Junior League of Clearwater Dunedin Junior League of St PetersburgIllinois Junior League of Evanston North Shore 17 Massachusetts Junior League of Boston Inc Junior League of Greater SpringfieldMississippi Junior League of Jackson featured in The Help book and filmNew York Junior League of Buffalo New York Junior League the first league Junior League of Kingston Junior League of Long Island Junior League of Schenectady and Saratoga Counties Junior League of PelhamNew Jersey Junior League of Princeton Junior League of Summit 18 North Carolina Junior League of Raleigh Junior League of Greensboro Junior League of Winston Salem 19 Junior League of Charlotte Junior League of Durham and Orange CountiesOhio Junior League of Akron Junior League of Cleveland Junior League of Cincinnati Junior League of Columbus Junior League of Dayton Junior League of ToledoOregon Junior League of PortlandPennsylvania Junior League of PhiladelphiaTexas Junior League of HoustonUtah Junior League of Salt Lake City Junior League of OgdenVirginia Junior League of Hampton Roads Junior League of Norfolk Virginia BeachWashington Junior League of Lower Columbia Junior League of Olympia 20 Junior League of Seattle Junior League of Spokane Junior League of TacomaWisconsin Junior League of Eau Claire 21 Junior League of Madison 22 Junior League of Milwaukee 23 Junior League of Racine 24 UK Junior League of London Membership edit Members of The Junior League obtain invaluable skills and experiences that empower them to punch above their weight as leaders in their local communities and beyond Here are a few of the areas in which they acquire skills or knowledge Leadership Organizational development Community needs assessment Mentoring Advocacy Communications Fund development Strategic planning Negotiation Consensus building and Networking Fundraisers and advocacy edit The Junior League has a full calendar year of members only family friendly and public events at their clubhouses and local venues such as hotels Notable JL events raising money for partner community organizations related to foster children domestic violence human trafficking illiteracy city beautification and other issues include but are not limited to Annual Winter Ball the Junior League s largest fundraiser since 1952 where League awards are given to honor outstanding members and a public figure such as Mary J Blige 2011 25 26 27 Non member dinner tickets start at 500 Annual Thanksgiving Eve Ball introducing debutantes to society at The Plaza and Waldorf Astoria since 1948 28 29 30 31 32 Savor the Spring Restaurant Week Spring House Tour Team JL at the New York City Marathon 33 The New York Junior League used to have a thrift shop where proceeds went to the community organizations Other JL initiatives include its contributions to the passage of the Clean Water Act free school lunch campaign Don t Wait to Vaccinate campaign and The Junior Leagues Kids in the Kitchen initiative which combats childhood obesity and educates families on health and nutrition 34 Notable League members and alums editAs of 2020 five first ladies of the U S have been Junior League members Politics and government Ann Bedsole first female Alabama State Senator 1983 1995 Margot Birmingham wife of 1992 1996 Presidential Candidate and businessman Ross Perot Florence Bird Canadian Senator appointed by Pierre Trudeau broadcaster and journalist Pam Bondi Attorney General of Florida Jeanne Milliken Bonds Mayor of Knightdale North Carolina and Regional Manager at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Barbara Bush 41st First Lady during George H W Bush administration Laura Bush 43rd First Lady during George W Bush administration Oveta Culp Hobby first secretary of the Department of Health Education and Welfare first commanding officer of the Women s Army Corps Pat Evans three term Mayor of Plano Texas 2002 2009 Betty Ford 38th First Lady during Gerald Ford administration DeDreana Freeman Member of the Durham City Council Judith Giuliani nee Nathan wife of 107th Mayor of New York City Rudolph Giuliani Margaret Hance first female Mayor of Phoenix Arizona Glenda Hood first female Mayor of Orlando Florida 1992 2003 Margaret McTavish Konantz Canadian Parliament first woman elected to Canadian House of Commons from Manitoba Mary Pillsbury Lord UN Delegate Stephanie Malone Arkansas House of Representatives member 2009 present Carolyn Maloney U S Congresswoman from New York 2013 present Doris Matsui U S Congresswoman from California 2005 present Bonnie McElveen Hunter diplomat 29th United States Ambassador to Finland Geanie Morrison Texas House of Representatives member 1999 present Willie Landry Mount Louisiana State Senator 2000 2012 first female Mayor of Lake Charles Louisiana Sandra Day O Connor Associate Justice of the U S Supreme Court 1981 2006 appointed by Ronald Reagan Diane Patrick Texas House of Representatives member Nancy Reagan 40th First Lady during Ronald Reagan administration Eleanor Roosevelt 32nd First Lady during Franklin D Roosevelt administration United Nations Delegate Margaret Chase Smith first female U S Senator and first to serve in both houses Bobbie Sparrow Canadian politician House of Commons Carole Keeton Strayhorn first female Mayor of Austin Texas 1977 1983 Deborah Taylor Tate FCC CommissionerBusiness Martha Rivers Ingram chairman of Ingram Industries after the death of her husband E Bronson Ingram II and philanthropistEntertainment media literature and fashion Julia Child TV chef and author of Mastering the Art of French Cooking Ruth Draper actress Margaret Hamilton actress best known for her portrayal of the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz Katharine Hepburn actress Ethma Odum pioneer woman television personality in Alexandria Louisiana 35 Suzanne Perron fashion designer Mena Webb writer and editor Eudora Welty Pulitzer Prize winning author Shirley Temple actress UN Delegate US AmbassadorMilitary Jeannie Deakyne Army Officer and Bronze Star Medal recipient Cornelia Fort first female pilot in American history to die on active dutyNonprofit and philanthropy Mary Harriman founder of the Junior League sister of 48th Governor of New York W Averell Harriman Dorothy Payne Whitney Whitney family member philanthropist NYJL President and first AJLI President Helenka Adamowska Pantaleoni U S Fund for UNICEF Co founder and President 1953 1978 Sally Dalton Robinson philanthropist and civic leader in Charlotte North CarolinaSports Sarah Palfrey Cooke two time Wimbledon champion Kerri Strug Olympic Gold medalist in gymnastics White House correspondent 36 In popular culture editFive and Ten 1931 film Marion Davies is shown volunteering at a Junior League Charity Bazaar The Official Preppy Handbook 1980 tongue in cheek reference guide book featuring the Junior League She s the Man 2006 film Viola and Olivia are seen taking part in a Junior League carnival The Help 2009 book and The Help 2011 film the film stars Emma Stone and Bryce Dallas Howard in the Junior League of Jackson Mississippi The Devil in the Junior League 2006 novel written by a former Junior Leaguer 37 38 originally set to star Jennifer Garner in the film version 39 Gilmore Girls TV series character Lorelai Gilmore stated she wore an inappropriate T Shirt to the Junior League Spring Tea 40 In Gossip Girl TV Season 1 Episode 10 Hi Society character Serena Van Der Woodsen questions her mother s introduction for her debut Serena van der Woodsen wants to work for the Junior League and have two children Mad Men TV series character Betty Draper is a member of the Junior League References edit a b AJLI FY 2018 2019 Financial Statement PDF AJLI 2019 Who We Are AJLI Archived from the original on 2023 04 04 Retrieved 2024 01 20 Mitchell Donn 2008 Debutantes of the World Unite The Irrespressible Mary Harriman The Anglican Examiner Presents The New York Anglicans Twenty Who Shaped the Twentieth Century The Anglican Examiner Retrieved 28 July 2020 a b The New York Junior League Throughout the Years The New York Junior League 2014 Retrieved 28 July 2020 a b The New York Junior League Throughout the Years The New York Junior League 2014 Retrieved 28 July 2020 a b Gray Christopher 5 December 1999 Streetscapes Readers Questions Junior League Garden Co op and Pumpkin House The New York Times Retrieved 28 July 2020 State Public Affairs Committees SPAC AJLI Retrieved 2024 01 21 Association of Children s Museums Says Thanks to The Junior League AJLI 2017 05 08 Retrieved 2024 01 21 Expanding the Museum s Impact Learn with Us The Art Institute Chicago Archived from the original on 21 March 2020 Retrieved 12 October 2021 Volunteerism surged in the United States in the postwar period In this context the Art Institute s to create the museum s Docent Program in 1961 with the Junior League of Chicago as a means of revitalizing and expanding programming for children Prodis Julia January 28 1996 Man Battles Junior League Over Policy of Admitting Only Women Los Angeles Times Boudreau John March 16 1996 CALIFORNIA HAIRDRESSER IN A LEAGUE OF HIS OWN The Washington Post STIFF LIPS Chicago Tribune February 15 1996 Simon Mark January 31 1996 San Jose Man Rebuffed by Junior League San Francisco Gate The Association of Junior Leagues International Civic Leadership Development for Women www ajli org Retrieved 2016 06 20 Junior League of San Francisco Junior League of Indian River Junior League of Evanston North Shore https summit jl org Junior League of Winston Salem Junior League of Olympia Junior League of Eau Claire Junior League of Madison Junior League of Milwaukee Junior League of Racine New York Junior League s 59th Annual Winter Ball Hamptons com February 21 2011 Retrieved January 17 2020 Maggie Maloney March 8 2018 Inside the New York Junior League s 66th Annual Winter Ball Town amp Country Retrieved January 17 2020 Inside The New York Junior League s 63rd Annual Winter Ball Guest of a Guest March 2 2015 Retrieved January 17 2020 Stephanie Cohen December 26 2010 Glove affair New York Post Retrieved January 17 2020 What s a Deb to Do in Hard Times Go to the Ball New York Times December 16 1990 Retrieved January 17 2020 Junior League Will Introduce 62 Debutantes New York Times September 29 1964 Retrieved January 17 2020 Junior League Debutante Ball Held at the Plaza Thanksgiving Week Parties Begin With Gala Benefit New York Times November 26 1959 Retrieved January 17 2020 Mollie Chen May 2 2002 Welcome to the Ball Harvard Crimson Retrieved January 17 2020 New York Junior League Events New York Junior League Retrieved January 17 2020 AJLI WHAT WE DO AJLI Retrieved January 17 2020 Ethma Ewing Odum March 22 2009 Alexandria Town Talk Archived from the original on June 2 2014 Retrieved June 2 2014 Charities 21 March 2016 Mia Geiger October 12 2006 Ex Junior Leaguer knows her characters Denver Post Retrieved January 17 2020 Jeannie Kever September 10 2006 Texas writer takes on the Junior League Houston Chronicle Retrieved January 17 2020 Jennifer Garner Is the Devil in the Junior League Movie Web February 13 2007 Retrieved January 17 2020 Gilmore Girls Quotes IMDb External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Junior League Association of Junior Leagues International New York Junior League Canadian Federation of Junior Leagues Junior League of London Junior League of the City of New York Survey of Significant Interiors 1984 1985 Held by the Department of Drawings amp Archives Avery Architectural amp Fine Arts Library Columbia University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Junior League amp oldid 1207149707, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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