About 38th Madam CJ Walker Awards Luncheon
The National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Inc. – Pennsylvania Chapter is pleased to announce our
The National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Inc. – Pennsylvania Chapter (NC100BW-PA) is a non-profit that advocates on behalf of Black women and girls to promote leadership development and gender equity in the areas of economic empowerment, education and health.
Annually we host our largest event, the Madam CJ Walker Awards Luncheon and Economic Empowerment Network Seminar, which recognizes the foresight and contributions of Madam CJ Walker. In 1985, the we awarded our first Madam CJ Walker Award, with the second award presented in 1988 -- to recognize the merits and achievements of local African American businesswomen in the Delaware Valley area.
Madam CJ Walker is recognized as one of the first self-made, African American female millionaires. She was born Sarah Breedlove on December 23, 1867, in Delta, Louisiana to extremely poor parents. Sarah’s parents died when she was six years old, leaving her to be reared by an older sister. Married at the age of 14 to Moses McWilliams of Vicksburg, Mississippi, she gave birth to a daughter, Lelia. The family lived in Vicksburg until the death of Mr. McWilliams.
Faced with the task of raising a young daughter and the challenges of an uncertain future, she moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where she worked for 18 years as a washerwoman to earn a living. In 1895, Madam Walker, using a trial and error method, reinvented a straightening comb to style her naturally curly hair. This invention was met with initial success and encouraged her to experiment with other hair care products, which she packed in jars and sold door-to-door. In 1906, she married Charles Joseph Walker and became known as Madam CJ Walker.
In 1910, she moved her operations to Indianapolis, Indiana, where the business flourished. Her business was incorporated and by 1913 contained a research laboratory and training school to teach the “Walker System” of hairstyling. The Walker Manufacturing Company became the largest business owned and operated by an African American.
At its zenith, the company employed more than 3,000 people and extended an entire city block. The company established beauty salons across the country had a large mail-order department and maintained a foreign operations division.
Madam Walker, in spite of her acclaim and wealth, remained dedicated to her race. She gave generously to Black organizations and charities and sponsored many Black artisans and artists. She is noted for her generosity to the NAACP, Tuskegee Institute, Bethune-Cookman College, and aspiring poets, writers, and other artists of the Harlem Renaissance.
Scholarship Awards
Each year, the National Coalition of 100 Black Women, Inc. - Pennsylvania Chapter, awards scholarships to African American women whose primary residence is in the Delaware Valley area. However, scholarship applicants can attend colleges or universities outside of the Delaware Valley area.
Raffles: Coming Soon!