File #: RS2023-60   
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 10/10/2023 In control: Metropolitan Council
On agenda: 10/17/2023 Final action: 10/17/2023
Title: A resolution recognizing the 125th anniversary of the YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee.
Sponsors: Joy Styles, Courtney Johnston, Ginny Welsch, Burkley Allen, Quin Evans-Segall, Zulfat Suara, Emily Benedict, Brenda Gadd, Erin Evans, Sandy Ewing, Jennifer Gamble, Delishia Porterfield, Kyonzte Toombs
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A resolution recognizing the 125th anniversary of the YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee.

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WHEREAS, YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women and promoting peace, justice, freedom and dignity for all; and

WHEREAS, the Young Women's Christian Association branch in Nashville was founded in 1898 in three rooms over the Gartner & Maden Millinery Shop at 227 North Summer Street, formerly 5th Avenue and now Rep. John Lewis Way; and

WHEREAS, in 1909, the YWCA broke ground on a new building on Vine Street, now 7th Avenue. At the time, there were no integrated buildings in Nashville, but the YWCA leadership was committed to extending programs to African American women; and

WHEREAS, the National YWCA funded the Blue Triangle Branch specifically for African-American women and purchased property for the branch at 5th and Gay streets in 1921; and

WHEREAS, the YWCA branches became a haven for women and girls in the following decades by offering a place for recreation, diversion, food, training, and fellowship; and

WHEREAS, the leaders of the Blue Triangle Branch played key roles in the women's suffrage movement and demanded that Congress pass anti-lynching laws; and

WHEREAS, the Downtown YWCA and the Blue Triangle Branch unified to become a single YWCA in 1964, but the organization did not become fully integrated until 1967; and

WHEREAS, the YWCA began its efforts to provide emergency facilities to women referred by the Rape and Crisis Center in 1974 and later opened the Try Angle House for troubled teenage girls in 1976; and

WHEREAS, the organization established CABLE and additional career and life planning programs as it moved into its facilities at Woodmont Boulevard in 1978; and

WHEREAS, YWCA Nashville & Middle Tennessee opened the city's first domestic violence shelter in 1980 and later opened the Weaver Domestic Violence Center, the largest emergency shelter of its kind in Tennessee, in 2000; and

WHERE...

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