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Helen Webb Harris

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Helen Webb Harris founded the Wake-Robin Golf Club in 1937. It is the United States' oldest registered African-American women's golf club.

Career

Harris was an educator in the Washington, DC school system.

Wake-Robin Golf Club

The first meeting of the club was held at her house with thirteen women attending. The club was named after the Wake-Robin wildflower.

Harris was the club's first president, and under her leadership the club joined the United Golf Association and the Eastern Golf Association. In 1938 the club drafted and sent a petition to Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes seeking to desegregate the public courses of the District of Columbia. In response Ickes approved the construction of a nine-hole golf course on the site of an abandoned trash dump, called Langston Golf Course, which opened in 1939.

The Wake-Robin Golf Club and the Royal Golf Club continued to pressure Secretary Ickes, and he issued an order in 1941 to open public courses to all. In 1947 Harris was elected as the first female president of the Eastern Golf Association, a position which she held for two terms. The Wake-Robin Golf Club was part of the movement to force the Professional Golfers Association to drop its "White-only" rule for eligibility, which it did in 1961.

Some of the Wake-Robin Golf Club's records are held at Howard University.

Recognition

In 1973 Harris was inducted into the National Afro‐American Golfers Hall of Fame.

The Helen Webb Harris Scholarship Fund was established in 2007.

References

  1. ^ "African American Golfer's Digest - News, Information & Activities in the 'Soulful' World of Golf". Africanamericangolfersdigest.com. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
  2. ^ M. Mikell Johnson Ph. D. (2010). Heroines of African American Golf. Trafford Publishing. pp. 1913–. ISBN 978-1-4269-3419-3.
  3. "The Wake Robin Golf Club founded | African American Registry". Aaregistry.org. 1936-08-06. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
  4. ^ Marvin P. Dawkins; Graham Charles Kinloch (1 January 2000). African American Golfers During the Jim Crow Era. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 32–. ISBN 978-0-275-95940-1.
  5. ^ "The African American Experience". Testaae.greenwood.com. Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
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