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1
HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of
3Representatives wish to recognize the George Washington Carver
4Community Center's rich, 100-year history; and
 
5    WHEREAS, The George Washington Carver Community Center's
6legacy is that of the Colored Women's Aid Club; and
 
7    WHEREAS, The Colored Women's Aid Club, founded in 1899,
8was an early and active member of a state and national network
9of African American women's organizations known as the Black
10Women's Club Movement; and
 
11    WHEREAS, The organization was part of the National
12Association of Colored Women's Clubs, founded in 1896, whose
13motto is "Lifting As We Climb", as well as its state affiliate,
14the Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs, founded in
151899, whose motto was "Loyalty to Women and Justice to
16Children"; and
 
17    WHEREAS, With like-minded women reformers throughout the
18State, Peoria's club women lobbied for measures such as
19women's suffrage, anti-lynching laws, and, especially,
20kindergartens, which would benefit young children and working
21mothers; they promoted citizenship classes to educate new

 

 

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1voters, investigated conditions in jails and poor houses,
2provided scholarships, and continuously raised money to help
3the poor and comfort the sick; as original partners of what is
4now the Heart of Illinois United Way and as early members of
5the Peoria Women's Civic Federation, the club fostered
6interracial collaboration; and
 
7    WHEREAS, By the 1920s, the Illinois Federation of Colored
8Women's Clubs was the largest organization in the State to
9champion the rights of Black people and the most comprehensive
10welfare agency meeting their needs, according to historian
11Wanda Hendricks; and
 
12    WHEREAS, In cities throughout the State, including
13Chicago, Evanston, Rockford, Canton, Danville, Bloomington,
14Springfield, East St. Louis, and Cairo, Black women involved
15in the club movement founded settlement houses, schools,
16orphanages, old folks' homes, and community centers; and
 
17    WHEREAS, In Peoria, the Colored Women's Aid Club opened
18the Negro Community Center on October 9, 1922, after raising
19$2,000 to buy a house at 108 S. Globe; the center grew as
20Peoria's Black population swelled with the Great Migration
21from the south; by 1937, the club had paid $4,500 in cash to
22move the center to a larger house at 1010 N. Sanford; and
 

 

 

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1    WHEREAS, A few years later, the Colored Women's Aid Club
2gave control to an interracial, community-wide board, which
3embarked on a $40,000 fundraising campaign to establish a new
4community center; and
 
5    WHEREAS, The Negro Community Center officially became the
6George Washington Carver Community Center in 1944; and
 
7    WHEREAS, The George Washington Carver Community Center is
8a cultural landmark, a site of memory, for the joys,
9struggles, and achievements of generations, many of whom
10became local legends in education, sports, politics, social
11justice, law enforcement, and the arts; the center has either
12influenced or been influenced by nationally recognized
13pioneers such as comedian Richard Pryor, Civil Rights
14activists C.T. Vivian and Valeska Hinton, basketball Olympians
15Charla Lewis and Carla McGee, and, notably, Elizabeth Lindsay
16Davis, a national leader and historian of the early Black
17Women's Club Movement; and
 
18    WHEREAS, The George Washington Carver Community Center is
19one of the last institutions in Illinois with direct links to
20the early Black Women's Club Movement; therefore, be it
 
21    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
22HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that

 

 

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1we recognize the George Washington Carver Community Center for
2its commitment to "Lifting As We Climb" on the 100th
3anniversary of its roots; and be it further
 
4    RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be
5presented to the George Washington Carver Community Center as
6a symbol of our respect and esteem.