AAUW State College Branch History
Founding (1916–1922)

In the winter of 1916, ten women gathered in a women’s dormitory on the Penn State campus to establish the Central Pennsylvania Branch of the Association of Collegiate Alumni (ACA). The women were seeking camaraderie but as college graduates, they also had a vested interest in advancing women’s education.
Six years later, the ACA merged with the American Association of University Women (now AAUW) and the State College Branch was born.
Early Advocacy
The State College Branch forged a foundation committed to gender equity in education and women’s welfare. It purchased materials for libraries, established a loan fund to assist women students, and lobbied for physical education facilities and women’s restrooms in public buildings.
It fought discrimination on co-ed campuses and pushed for national legislation that benefitted women and children.

Community Impact

Members contributed $5 to help future Nobel Prize recipient Marie Curie buy radium, which was given to her by President Harding on behalf of American women.
By mid-century, AAUW members were integral to enhancing the quality of life in a burgeoning State College. They funded and/or initiated local nonprofits including:
- Centre County Food Bank
- Senior Citizens Center
- Voluntary Action Center
- Schlow Memorial Library
- International Hospitality Council
- Women’s Resource Center
The Used Book Sale
In 1962, a handful of branch members with foresight started a Used Book Sale in State College that netted all of $176. Today the annual Used Book Sale has grown into a popular community event involving hundreds of volunteers and the sale of nearly a quarter of a million books.

Giving Back

Using the funds raised, the branch has donated approximately $2.5 million to community programs and scholarships benefitting women, funded a series of forum lecturers at Penn State University, and has established a fellowship to enable international women to study in the United States.
This philanthropy has helped to fulfill the promise of empowering women that was begun by just ten women in 1916 and continues today by the committed members of AAUW State College.
Centennial History 1916–2016
Public restrooms for women, university sports fields dedicated to female athletes, the first local day care center: for generations, local women have struggled to increase equity for women and children, one issue at a time. Read more about their experiences here.


