The CRIER Fall 2021

Page 38

Originally the Welfare League in 1924, the Junior League of Charlotte, Inc. (JLC) committed significant financial and volunteer resources to local agencies and projects that focused on the most critical needs of the Charlotte community. In its infancy, the JLC saw the need to support local orphaned and underprivileged children. 1926 brought exciting changes. After joining the Association of Junior Leagues of America (AJLA, now known as AJLI or the Association of Junior Leagues International) and having utilized a donated cottage for a temporary orphanage, the membership voted to construct its own Baby Home at a value of $16,000. Today that would be the equivalent of $250,000. The Baby Home operated until 1935 and was subsequently replaced by the Children’s Service Bureau. This shift was vital, as the JLC was able to advocate for the children of Charlotte more broadly. Free youth art classes, a children’s community theatre, weekly radio broadcasts delivering wholesome content, and a junior exhibit at the Mint Museum, all became family fixtures into the 1940s. The 1950s ushered great changes as the new Junior League Thrift Shop collected donations to support a massive undertaking. Coupled with a community health focus, a generous donation to the Mecklenburg Tuberculosis Sanatorium was made, and ground was broken for a permanent Children’s Nature Museum in 1950. It still stands in its original location in Freedom Park.

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Current Focus Area: Starting June 1, 2018, the JLC began partnering with our community to ensure that all children are school ready by focusing on the health and educational needs of children from birth to fifth grade in six priority zip codes of Mecklenburg County.


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