Julia Evangeline Brooks

Julia Evangeline Brooks

[1900 U.S. Federal Census. Washington, District of Columbia. Supervisor's District 1, Enumeration District 48, Sheet 14B. 12 June 1900.]
birth_place=New Orleans, Louisiana, US
death_date=November 24, 1948
death_place=Washington, D.C., US
spouse=
children=
parents=Walter Henderson Brooks and Eva Holmes Brooks

Julia Evangeline Brooks (June, 1882 – November 24, 1948) was an incorporator of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated, the first sorority founded by African American women. The sorority has continued to generate social capital for nearly 100 years.

Having earned a B.A. degree at Howard and M.A. at Columbia University, Brooks was a devoted educator for the rest of her life. She worked most of her life at the academic, prestigious Dunbar High School in Washington, DC. Brooks was an assistant principal there for 26 years, and also served as dean of girls. These were unusual positions of authority for any woman of that time. Brooks inspired generations of students.

Early life

Julia was one of ten children born to Walt Henderson Brooks and Eva Holmes Brooks in New Orleans, Louisiana. Her father, a slave as a child, grabbed at the chance for education, earning B.A. and theology degrees from Lincoln University in Oxford, Pennsylvania in 1873. He became a minister in Washington, DC.

During her youth, Julia attended public schools in Washington, D.C.. Julia was enrolled at Sumner Magruder Elementary School and M Street High School. This was the academic high school for African Americans in Washington, named in 1916 for the poet Paul Laurence Dunbar. It had an illustrious faculty and high standards, and attracted the best students from Washington and other cities in the South. [ [http://www.tsowell.com/speducat.html The Education of Minority Children] Retrieved 2007-12-12]

After graduating high school, Julia Brooks enrolled in Miner Normal School, a training school for teachers. She taught primary school for a few years, then Brooks went on to Howard University for more education. It was one of the top two historically black colleges in the nation, at a time when only 1/3 of 1% of African Americans and 5% of whites of eligible age attended any college. [James D. Anderson, "Black Education in the South, 1860-1935". Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988, p.245]

College life and incorporation of Alpha Kappa Alpha

Brooks was one of several members who were early supporters of the idea of incorporating Alpha Kappa Alpha to provide for its future expansion. As a result, Brooks, Nellie Quander, Norma Boyd, Nellie Pratt Russell, Minnie B. Smith and Ethel Jones Mowbray incorporated Alpha Kappa Alpha on January 29, 1913.cite book
last =Giddings
first =Paula
title = In Search of Sisterhood: Delta Sigma Theta and the Challenge of the Black Sorority Movement
publisher = HarperCollins Publishers
date = 1988
location = New York, New York
pages = 53
id =0688135099
] Brooks and the other incorporators, were listed by name in Article Four of the sorority's Certificate of Incorporation. After incorporation, Julia served as treasurer of the directorate until 1923.

Career and Later life

After graduation from Howard University with a B.A. degree in 1916, Brooks was qualified to teach at the high school level. She taught Spanish and English for six years at Washington D.C.'s prestigious Dunbar High School. Brooks went on to graduate study during summers at Columbia University in New York City and received her Master of Arts in 1928.

Brooks devoted her life to education. Beginning in 1922, Julia Brooks was promoted to assistant principal at Dunbar High School, the academic high school for African Americans. This was an unusual position of authority for any woman and made her prominent in the Washington educational community. Brooks served in this position for 26 years, through the rest of her life. She was also appointed Dean of Girls. Because the District was run as part of the Federal government, African American teachers in the public schools were paid on the same scale as whites. The city attracted outstanding teachers. [Thomas Sowell, [http://www.tsowell.com/speducat.html The Education of Minority Children] Retrieved 12 December 2007]

Brooks directly assisted six nieces and nephews with obtaining a college education by support, taking them to special events, tutoring when necessary, and contributing financially.

She was a charter member of Xi Omega chapter in Washington, D.C., established in 1923. Julia Brooks wrote an early history of the sorority, which she gave at the 1923 Boulé in Baltimore, Maryland. At Founders' Day at Xi Omega on January 30, 1924, the history was presented as a lecture. Julia Brooks died on November 24, 1948.

References

External links

* [http://www.studentorg.vcu.edu/thetarho/brooks.html Julia Evangeline Brooks Biography at Virginia Commonwealth University]


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