Eva del Vakia Bowles | |
---|---|
1918
|
|
Born |
Albany, Athens County, Ohio |
January 24, 1875
Died | June 14, 1943 Richmond, Virginia |
(aged 68)
Nationality | American |
Other names | Eva D. Bowles |
Occupation | educator, social worker, organizer |
Years active | 1905-1943 |
Known for | first black women to hold the position of general secretary of the YWCA |
Eva del Vakia Bowles (1875 – 1943) was an American teacher and a Young Women's Christian Association organizer in New York City. When she began working at the New York City colored YWCA in Harlem, she became the first black woman to be a general secretary of the organization. For eighteen years she organized black branches of the YWCA and expanded their services to community members. She received recognition from former president Theodore Roosevelt for her work during World War I on behalf of the colored Y.
Eva del Vakia Bowles was born on January 24, 1875 in Albany, Ohio to Mary Jane (née Porter) and John Hawkes Bowles. Her father was the first black principal of a school in Marietta, Ohio and later served as one of the first black railroad postal clerks in Ohio. Her paternal grandfather, John Randolph Bowles was a Baptist minister and served as the chaplain of the 55th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment during the civil war. After attending public schools in Albany, Bowles went on to continue her education at Bliss Business College in Columbus while taking summer classes at Ohio State University.
Bowles began her career as a teacher at several black colleges: Chandler Normal School in Lexington, Kentucky; St. Augustine’s College of Raleigh, North Carolina, and St. Paul’s School in Lawrenceville, Virginia. In 1905, while she was teaching in Virginia, Bowles was approached by Addie Waites Hunton, whose husband William was secretary of the Colored Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) of Harlem. Hunton recruited Bowles to spearhead a project for the sister project, the YWCA association of New York, to address the needs of black women. When she took up the post, later that year, Bowles became the first black woman employed as a YWCA secretary in the United States. In 1908, she studied social work at Columbia University in the school of philanthropy.