Life
Bennett College fundraises $8.2 million – surpasses goal and keeps accreditation
Bennett College President Phyllis Worthy Dawkins announced on Monday that the College has raised US$8.2 million in its #StandWithBennett Campaign.
“So, we have come to the moment that you have been waiting for,” Dawkins said inside a packed Annie Merner Pfeiffer Chapel. “As of today, and let me just say we are still counting. We are still counting money. But as of today, Bennett College has raised US$8.2 million.”
Dawkins’ announcement was met with jubilation, as Bennett students, alumnae and others began jumping up and down in their pews. Many cried, others hugged and some looked shocked.
After the total was announced, Brooke Ashley Kane, Miss Bennett College, spoke briefly.
“I would like to thank everyone for coming here today and for the many gifts we received,” said Kane, a political science major from Upper Marlboro, Maryland. “It is a blessing. But I want my Bennett sisters to remember that the bell is our icon and it represents our school. Bells are strong, and they will never stop historically ringing. As Bennett Belles we too are strong, and we must hold ourselves to a higher standard and ensure that our ringing voices are heard, not only for the sisterhood within these gates but in the world in which we expect to make a difference.”
The Bennett College Choir, under the leadership of alumna Dorthea L. Taylor ’99, closed the event by leading the audience in “The Preference Song“. Afterward, Dawkins kept her promise to ring Bennett’s bell if the College reached its goal of raising a minimum of US$5 million. A reception ensued in the Wilbur Steele Hall Art Gallery.
The press conference began with an invocation from the Reverend Jamal Bryant, pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Atlanta. New Birth donated US$16,000 to the College and was one of the first faith-based institutions to contribute to the campaign.
Gladys Ashe Robinson ’71, chair of the Bennett College Board of Trustees, Gwendolyn Mackel Rice ’61, president of the Bennett College Alumnae Association, and Shani McMichael, valedictorian of the class of 2018, also spoke. McMichael entered Bennett with a 2.3 GPA but graduated with a near-perfect 3.9 GPA and is now in graduate school at Columbia University. A postcard bearing a photo of her speaking at Commencement was used throughout the campaign to help raise money.
Also speaking at the press conference were LaDaniel Gatling, II, vice president for institutional advancement, Kwanza Jones, who with her husband José E. Feliciano announced a US$1 million gift to the College during the press conference, and High Point University (HPU) President Nido Qubein.
On February 1, Bennett’s deadline for raising the US$5 million, Qubein announced during a press conference inside HPU’s Charles E. Hayworth Memorial Chapel that HPU was pledging up to US$1 million to Bennett as a challenge grant.
At Monday’s press conference, Qubein came bearing more gifts, including: a US$650 check from money HPU students collected in their chapel; a check from an individual HPU student for US$1,000; a check from an HPU parent for US$10,000; a check from the Wyndham Championship for US$25,000, a check from Old Dominion Freight Line for US$100,000 and a check from BB&T Bank for US$200,000. In all, Qubein dropped off a total of US$357,500 in checks.
On December 11, 2018, Bennett College was removed from membership in the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges. Bennett immediately appealed the decision and remains accredited during the appeal process. Bennett was removed strictly for financial reasons and was not sanctioned for its academics, faculty, leadership or students.
Founded in 1873 as a coeducational institution, Bennett College became women’s only in 1926. Spelman College in Atlanta is the country’s only other all-women’s HBCU.
Bennett College has a rich history of producing outstanding women leaders, including: the first African American woman licensed surgeon in the south; the first woman or African American to head the U.S. Peace Corps; the first African American mayor of the city of Greensboro, North America; the first African American female mayor in the state of Washington; the writer of the screenplay “The Loving Story,” which in 2016 was turned into an Academy Award-nominated motion picture; the first woman to hold the position of Director of Drug Program and Policies and youngest Director within the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA); and the first African American woman to serve as Assistant Attorney General in the state of Massachusetts – just to name a few.
Current Bennett College students or recent graduates are also impressive, including senior administration major Tyler Binion, who was selected among 63 students to serve as a Competitiveness Scholar through the White House Initiative on historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), and Delrisha White ’13, who enrolled in Bennett College from the foster care system in San Francisco – White graduated with honors and is now earning her master’s degree at Harvard.
Source: Bennett College
