Paula Washington, Sharon Washington, Marion Randall, Cathryn Radford, Pamala Griffon-Armstead, Marilyn Morris, Nancy Keenan, Roberta Ray, Maxine Trower, Yvonne Ray, and seated President Donna Osborne.
Chapter History
Gloucester resident Georgia Redcross, a member of the Newport News Chapter, envisioned bringing the sorority to her hometown. On July 11, 1981, Iota Phi Lambda Sorority, Inc., chartered Epsilon Eta Chapter at the Moton Conference Center in Gloucester County, Va.
The charter members were Patricia Catlett, Velma B. Chapman, Lorraine Driver, Florine C. Ellis, LaVerne C. Forrest, Gwendolyn L. Lee, and Marion C. Randall.
Sorority History
Early in 1929, Mrs. Lola Mercedes Parker of Chicago, Illinois, was stimulated by the need and a great vision of an organization which would offset the results caused by the Great Depression. Many black women who were working at comparatively new skills in white-collar jobs in the business field were doubly penalized by race and sex. Mrs. Parker called together six friends to discuss a plan for establishing an organization that would add prestige to the field of business and to those women who had chosen business as a career. Such an organization would encourage, inspire, nurture, and give assistance to those people engaged in business vocations. Thus, the first chapter, Alpha, was created, marking the first step in the organization of a national business sorority. Since that time, other professions have been embraced; however, the major emphasis has remained in the broad field of the business arena. There are now more than 50 chapters with membership numbering more than one thousand in cities throughout the US including the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
To visit the national Iota Phi Lambda website, please click here.