About This Item


  • Call NumberALPH_0023
  • TitleProgram for reception honoring Richard R. Green, chancellor of New York city public schools. Hosted by Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity.
  • SummaryProgram for reception honoring Richard R. Green, chancellor of New York city public schools. Text reads: Metropolitan/New York Chapters of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. welcome brother Chancellor Dr. Richard R. Green, Thursday Evening, November 10, 1988, Schimmel Theater, Pace University, New York City. Welcome and Acknowledgements : Brother Steven Skinner, Associate Director, New York State, District III. Remarks : Brother Steven P. Cuffey, Area Director IV; Brother Dr. Willie Bryant, Area Director III; Brother Darren Morton, Assistant Director, New York State, District III. Introduction: Chancellor Green; Brother Dr. George L. Mims, Director, New York State, District III. Presentation. Closing Remarks: Brother Dr. Hobart Jarrett, Past President, Gamma Iota Lambda Chapter, Brooklyn, New York. Announcements. Fraternity Hymn and Prayer. Program inscribed in ink on front: "Richard R. Green." Inscribed on back: "Brother Green- I need to know when were you 'made' Gamma Iota Lambda. Your chapter name 19[2/7?]6. Anything about your family."
  • Date1988-11-10
  • Formatstill image
  • Physical Description1 image file : digital, TIFF, black and white
  • Genreprograms (documents)
  • Biographical NoteAlpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., the first intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established for African American men, was founded on December 4, 1906 at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York by seven college men who recognized the need for a strong bond of brotherhood among African descendants in the United States. The fraternity initially served as a study and support group for minority students who faced racial prejudice, both educationally and socially, at Cornell. The founders, known to their brethren as the ‘seven jewels,’ along with early leaders of the fraternity, laid a firm foundation for Alpha Phi Alpha’s principles of scholarship, fellowship, good character, and the uplifting of humanity. The organization has been interracial since 1945. Alpha Phi Alpha chapters were established at other colleges and universities, many of them historically black institutions, soon after the founding at Cornell. The first alumni chapter was established in 1911. The Gamma Iota Lambda Chapter was chartered in Brooklyn in 1945 with the aim of advancing the well-being of Black Brooklynites and established programs to promote education, health and justice in their neighborhoods. Among the membership are attorneys, civic leaders, architects, clergy, educators, physicians, and veterans. The visual series of the collection, connected to the Gamma Iota Lambda Chapter, consists mostly of photographs but also includes event programs, tickets, brochures and obituaries. Some of the photographs were housed in an album with captions written under the items. In most cases, these captions were written by member John R. Rice, Jr. Other photographs had inscriptions on the reverse, or had separate caption documents. All of this information has been added to the item record.
  • CreatorUnknown
  • SubjectAfrican American fraternal organizations ; Fraternal organizations--United States ; African Americans ; Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Gamma Iota Lambda Chapter
  • CollectionAlpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Gamma Iota Lambda Chapter records
  • Finding AidView the finding aid
  • PlaceLower Manhattan (New York, N.Y.)
  • Cite AsAlpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Gamma Iota Lambda Chapter records, Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History
  • RightsCopyright restrictions apply to the use of this work. For more information or to obtain a reproduction of this work, contact the Center for Brooklyn History at Brooklyn Public Library.