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The American News
Women's Club was founded on April 4, 1932, as the Newspaper Women's
Club, with membership limited to women reporters and writers
employed by newspapers. Today, the ANWC embraces a diverse group
of journalists, independent authors and professional communicators
representing newspapers, radio and television stations, publishing
companies, Web sites, public relations firms, corporations, academic
institutions and government. The broader membership base reflects
an evolving news.
Former Club Presidents at Birthday Celebration:
Pauline Inness, Nancy Lang, Jean Ross Howard-Phelan,
Ginny Daly, Marj Skinker, Helen White.
Founders Margaret Hart Canby of
The Evening Star and Katharine H. Brooks of The Washington Post
intended to create an elite news club exclusively for newspaper
women by breaking away from the Women's National Press Club,
which included non-reporters and publicity.
The organizing
members of the Newspaper Women's Club were women journalists
from the Washington newspapers of that era: The Evening Star,
The Washington Post, The Washington Times and The Washington
Herald. The Club also admitted a limited number of prominent
women who had been helpful to women reporters gathering news.
These "Associate
Members" endure as a vital segment of Club membership.
Club Name
The Club's
name has changed several times during its 67-year history. In
the early 1940s, active membership grew to include women in Latin
America, and the "Newspaper Women's Club" became the "American
Newspaper Women's Club." In 1981, the current name, "American
News Women's Club" was adopted, permitting women from radio,
television, magazines, newsletters, public relations and public
affairs to join their newspaper colleagues and identify professionally
with the Club.
Our Move To Embassy
Row
In April 1932, the "Clubhouse" was
the Ladies' Dining Room of the National Press Club. Meetings
were Mondays at tea time. When Prohibition was repealed in February
1933, the Press Club asked the women to move in order to enlarge
the Press Club bar, a popular watering hole for thirsty newsmen.
The newswomen then rented a second-floor space at 1406 H Street,
NW, for $25 a month.
Several years and moves later, the
Club began renovating space in a one-story building at 1604 20th
Street, NW. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt officially inaugurated
the clubhouse when she turned the key to open the door. The Club
finally purchased a permanent home at 1607 22nd Street, NW, in
1961, and the mortgage, paid in full, was burned at the Women's
National Bank in 1979.
The Club established several traditions
early on. Six months after formation, a party was held honoring
Mrs. Herbert Hoover. Later that year, the Club honored Virginia
native Nancy Witcher Langhorn Astor, the first woman to be a
Member of Parliament in Britain. First Ladies traditionally have
been invited into Honorary membership, an honor also extended
to and accepted by Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Mother of Great
Britain. Amelia Earhart became a member shortly before her fatal
flight.
The American News Women's Club was
named a historic site in journalism by the National Society
of Professional Journalists (SPJ).
SPJ is the nation's largest organization
of journalists. The president of the Washington Professional
Chapter of SPJ, Ann Augherton, and Vice President Julie Asher
formally announced the historic site designation at the Clubhouse
on Oct. 16, 2002.
"Your club joins a roll call
of honorees that includes about 90 or more individuals, organizations
and places of historic interest," Augherton said in making
the announcement. "This designation recognizes the efforts
of women to attain equality with men in the practice of journalism."
ANWC Celebrated its 100th Birthday in 2002.
Eleanor Roosevelt with Club members
Past President Karen James Cody
receives plaquefrom
National Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ).
The American News Women's Club was named an
historic site in journalism in 2003.
DEDICATION OF THE ANWC CLUB AS A HISTORIC SITE
Wednesday, November 5
6:30 pm - 8:30 pm
The American News Women's Club clubhouse will
be officially designated a " Historic Site in Journalism", when
the Club and SPJ D.C. Chapter hold a joint program in November.
The program will feature Pulitzer prize winner AP reporter Walter
Mears who will discuss his new book and officially unveil the
plaque signifying the honor to the club. With just a year to
go before the next presidential election, Mears will discuss "Deadlines
Past: Forty Years of Presidential Campaigning: A Reporter's Story."
SPJ is one of our sister organizations, under
the new Women's Media Council, which also includes AWRT-DC, the
American News Women's Club (ANWC), andWomen In Film and Video
(WIFV).
One
of the nation's oldest press clubs, The American News Women's Club is
a national nonprofit 501(c)(3) offering educational and professional development
programs in support of women in the journalism and communications professions.
The annual ANWC "Helen Thomas Award" benefit gala awards annual scholarships
to journalism schools. In 2003, the organization was named an historic
site in journalism by the National Society of Professional Journalists
(SPJ).