Working Together to Make A Brighter Future
About Us
PREAMBLE
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, hereinafter referred to as the “NAACP” or the “Association,” was founded on the beliefs embodied in the Constitution of the United States of America. We support democracy, dignity and freedom. Members of the NAACP, in keeping with the charge of our founders, stand against all forms of injustice. The United States of America, built by us all, belongs to all of us. The repayment for our labor is equity and justice for all. The NAACP will continue to fight for justice until all, without regard to race, gender, creed or religion, enjoy equal status.
NAACP VISION STATEMENT
The vision of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is to ensure a society in which all individuals have equal rights and there is no racial hatred or racial discrimination.
NAACP MISSION STATEMENT
The mission of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People is to ensure the political, educational, social and economic equality of rights of all persons and to eliminate racial hatred and racial discrimination.
Officers of the PE County Branch NAACP 2025–2026

James Ghee, Jr., President
When James Ghee was a child, he was sent 1,000 miles from his home to attend school. Ghee was one of 66 African-American students sent out of state to get an education when the public schools in Prince Edward County shut down after refusing to obey the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1954 decision outlawing school segregation. He attended school and college in Iowa before returning to Virginia. Ghee attended the University of Virginia School of Law in 1969, he said his class included the largest number of black people ever admitted to the school. In 1975, Ghee returned home and became the first African-American practicing attorney in Prince Edward County. Ghee has been active with the NAACP for many years, serving on the local, state and national levels in various capacities.

Reverend W. Roger Dove, Sr., First Vice President
Reverend W. Roger Dove was born in Prince Edward County, VA to the late William & Doretha Dove. He has four children, three stepchildren and ten grandchildren. He is married to Rachel Streat Dove and serves as Associate Minister of Forest Baptist Church in Meherrin, VA since 2003. He is a graduate of the Evans-Smith Leadership Training Institute of the Virginia Union University Samuel Dewitt Proctor School of Theology. He is a retired business administrator and International Representative for ACTWU. His own business was home building.

Lonnie Calhoun, III, Second Vice President
Lonnie Calhoun is a retired specialist of multicultural and international education with a focus on competency-based workforce development strategies for clients particularly in China and Africa. Lonnie designs programs and initiatives based on evidence/research and believes that it is critical to project sustainability to build organization capacity and create strategic relationships with organizations and individuals in the US and abroad. He has designed international projects, performed education sector assessments, and analyzed data related to non-formal education, health, literacy, and appropriate technology projects in Southern Africa.

Reverend Kimberly Ashton, Third Vice President
Kimberly serves as Associate Minister of First Baptist Church, where she assists in serving the needs of the congregation and community outreach. She holds a BA degree from Hampton University. Additionally, she has earned her Master’s and Doctoral degrees in Christian Counseling from GBC & T Seminary. Kimberly also possesses a Certificate of Paralegal Studies from the University of Richmond.
At a young age, Kimberly acquired Spanish language skills, which proved invaluable throughout her educational pursuits. As a teacher for Speakers of Other Languages, she has fostered linguistic and cultural understanding. Her experiences living and teaching in Japan have deepened her appreciation for diverse cultures.
Beyond her professional duties, Kimberly serves on the YMCA Board. She pursues a variety of passions, including teaching group fitness, reading, language learning, and studying Martial Arts. Her personal philosophy resonates with the wisdom of Dr. Mae Jemison: “Never be limited by other people’s limited imaginations.”

Mary Jane Ghee, Secretary
Mary Jane Ghee is a native of Hanover County, VA and first became involved in the NAACP as Secretary to the Hanover County Youth chapter at an early age. After graduating from Lynchburg College, she returned to Hanover and became Secretary of the Branch eventually serving as Assistant Secretary of the Orange County Branch before being elected a Secretary to the Prince Edward County Branch.

Beverly Abdus-Sabur, Assistant Secretary
Beverly Abdus-Sabur is a retired librarian residing in Green Bay with her husband of 55 years, Dr. Qadir AbdusSabur. They, along with their children moved to Southside in 1982 where she worked for Prince Edward Public Schools, Longwood University, later Virginia Union University as well as Richmond Public Schools. Their children, grandchildren and now great grandchildren attend Prince Edward Public schools. Beverly has served in several community organizations over the years including the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, 4H, VA Extension, Friends of the Barbara Johns Farmville-Prince Edward Library, VA Children’s Book Festival and the Islamic Center of Prince Edward. The family now farms in Leigh District.

Shonda Eanes, Treasurer
Shonda has been a resident of Prince Edward County since 1998. Originally from Victoria, Virginia, she is a graduate of Central High School. She is married to Vincent Eanes Jr. and they have two children, Shariah and Vilontae Eanes. She has been employed with Crossroads Community Services Board for over 19 years and has a bachelor’s degree in human and social services. Shonda is a very active member of Cornerstone Baptist Church.

Eva Bland, Assistant Treasurer
Eva Venus Allen Bland is married to Floyd Bland and is the mother of four children. She graduated from Prince Edward County High School and the Southside School of Nursing as a licensed practical nurse. Eva is an active member of the New Witt Baptist Church, a member of several organizations, and the assistant treasurer of the NAACP chapter of Prince Edward County. She loves to sing, dance and participate in sports activities, especially bowling and fishing.
My motto: Life is work and we are created with all the tools to attend to the many tasks along our journey, and I try my best to do it well.

Pauline Watkins Stokes, Chaplain
Pauline Stokes is a retired Family and Consumer Science SNAP-Ed Instructor at Prince Edward County Extension Services through Virginia Tech.
Pauline served on several community Organization Boards such as Piedmont Senior Resources Area Agency on Aging, Prince Edward County Meals on Wheels, Farmville Area Habitat for Humanity, Board member of PECPS Health Advisory Committee and second vice president of Bluestone Harmony Association of Clergy Ministries
She was an ordained Deacon and now a Licensed, Ordained Baptist Minister. She served as the pastor of Baptist Temple Church, Petersburg, VA, and is a member of the Forest Baptist Church, Meherrin, VA.
Pauline was married to the late Horace Stokes Jr. and is the mother of three children, Horace III, Debora and Lakisha, and six grandchildren and two great grandchildren. Her life’s passion has been, “If I can help somebody.” Pauline was affected by the closing of schools in Prince Edward County. She obtained her B.S. degree in Business Administration from Saint Paul’s College Lawrenceville, VA. in 2007 under the Brown v Board of Education Scholarship Fund.

Newly installed officers for 2025–2027
Standing Committee Chairs
Budget – Mr. Lonnie Calhoun
Civic Engagement and Political Action – Mr. Armstead Reid
Communications – Mrs. Beverly Abdus-Sabur, Reverend Pauline Stokes, Mr. Lonnie Calhoun
Criminal Justice – Mrs. Dana Ratliffe-Walker
Education – Ms. Dajma Livingston
Freedom Fund – Reverend Pauline Stokes
Health – Mr. Lonnie Calhoun, Reverend Pauline Stokes
Membership – Mrs. Rachel Dove
Membership Appeal – Family in January, Church in February, Organizations and Professionals in March, Veterans in April and Youth in May with an emphasis in establishing a Youth Council
Publicity and Communications – Mr. Cameron Patterson
Religious Affairs – Reverend Roger Dove
Veterans – Mrs. Eva Bland
History of the NAACP
OUR HISTORY
Our work and our activists carrying the civil rights torch forward are our legacy. Since our founding in 1909, we have been, and continue to be, on the front lines of the fight for civil rights and social justice.
OUR FOUNDERS
In 1908, a deadly race riot rocked the city of Springfield, eruptions of anti-black violence – particularly lynching – were horrifically commonplace, but the Springfield riot was the final tipping point that led to the creation of the NAACP. Appalled at this rampant violence, a group of white liberals that included Mary White Ovington and Oswald Garrison Villard (both the descendants of famous abolitionists), William English Walling and Dr. Henry Moscowitz issued a call for a meeting to discuss racial justice. Some 60 people, seven of whom were African American (including W. E. B. Du Bois, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, and Mary Church Terrell), signed the call, which was released on the centennial of Lincoln’s birth.
On February 12, 1909, the nation’s largest and most widely recognized civil rights organization was born.
Echoing the focus of Du Bois’ Niagara Movement for civil rights, which began in 1905, NAACP aimed to secure for all people the rights guaranteed in the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments to the United States Constitution, which promised an end to slavery, provide equal protection of the law, and the right for all men to vote, respectively. Accordingly, the NAACP’s mission is to ensure the political, educational, equality of minority group citizens of States and eliminate race prejudice. The NAACP works to remove all barriers of racial discrimination through democratic processes.
The national office was established in New York City in 1910 as well as a board of directors and president, Moorfield Storey, a white constitutional lawyer and former president of the American Bar Association. Other early members included Joel and Arthur Spingarn, Josephine Ruffin, Mary Talbert, Inez Milholland, Jane Addams, Florence Kelley, Sophonisba Breckinridge, John Haynes Holmes, Mary McLeod Bethune, George Henry White, Charles Edward Russell, John Dewey, William Dean Howells, Lillian Wald, Charles Darrow, Lincoln Steffens, Ray Stannard Baker, Fanny Garrison Villard, and Walter Sachs. Despite a foundational commitment to multiracial membership, Du Bois was the only African American among the organization’s original executives. He was made director of publications and research and in 1910 established The Crisis, the acclaimed publication of the NAACP.
A PERIOD OF GROWTH
By 1913, with a strong emphasis on local organizing, NAACP had established branch offices in such cities as Boston, MA, Baltimore, MD, Kansas City, MO, St. Louis, MO, Washington, D.C., and Detroit, MI. NAACP membership grew rapidly, from around 9,000 in 1917 to around 90,000 in 1919, with more than 300 local branches.
Joel Spingarn, a professor of literature and one of the NAACP founders formulated much of the strategy that fostered the organization’s growth. He was elected board chairman of the NAACP in 1915 and served as president from 1929-1939. Writer and diplomat James Weldon Johnson became the Association’s first black executive secretary in 1920, and Louis T. Wright, a surgeon, was named 1934.
A series of early court battles, including a victory against a discriminatory Oklahoma law that regulated voting by means of a grandfather clause (Guinn v. States, 1910), helped establish the NAACP’s importance as a legal advocate. The fledgling organization also learned to harness the power of publicity through its 1915 battle against D. W. Griffith’s inflammatory Birth of a Nation, a motion picture that perpetuated demeaning stereotypes of African Americans and glorified the Ku Klux Klan.
Among the Association’s top priorities was eradicating lynching. Throughout its 30-year campaign, the NAACP waged legislative battles, gathered and published crucial statistics, organized mass protests, and produced artistic material all in the name of bringing an end to the violence. After early worries about its constitutionality, the NAACP strongly supported the federal Dyer Bill, which would have punished those who participated in or failed to prosecute lynch mobs. Though the U.S. House of Representatives passed the bill, a Senate filibuster defeated it for good in 1922. Despite repeated opportunities in years to follow, such as the Costigan-Wagner Bill, Congress never passed any anti-lynching legislation. Many credit the NAACP report “Thirty Years of Lynching in the United States, 1889-1919” and the public debate that followed with drastically decreasing the incidence of lynching.
In 1930, Walter F. White succeeded Johnson as executive secretary. White was instrumental not only in his research on lynching (in part because, as a very fair-skinned African American, he had been able to infiltrate white groups but also in his successful block of segregationist Judge John J. Parker’s nomination by President Herbert Hoover to the U.S. Supreme Court.
White presided over the NAACP’s most productive period of legal advocacy. In 1930 the association commissioned the Margold Report, which became the basis for the successful reversal of the separate-but-equal doctrine that had governed public facilities since Plessy v. Ferguson (1896). In 1935, White recruited Charles H. Houston as NAACP chief counsel. Houston was the Howard University law school dean whose strategy on school-segregation cases paved the way for his protégé Thurgood Marshall to prevail in 1954’s Brown v. Board of Education, the decision that overturned Plessy.
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, which was disproportionately disastrous for African Americans, NAACP began to focus on economic justice. After years of tension with white labor unions, the Association cooperated with the newly formed Congress of Industrial Organizations in an effort to win jobs for black Americans. White, a friend and adviser to First Lady – and NAACP national board member – Eleanor Roosevelt, met with President Franklin D. Roosevelt to outlaw job discrimination in the armed forces, defense industries, and the agencies created by the New Deal.
Roosevelt ultimately agreed to open thousands of jobs to black workers when labor leader A. Philip Randolph, in collaboration with the NAACP, threatened a national March on Washington movement in 1941. President Roosevelt also set up a Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC) to ensure compliance.
Throughout the 1940s, the NAACP saw enormous growth in membership, recording roughly 600,000 members by 1946. It continued to act as a legislative and legal advocate, and for an end to state-mandated segregation.
CIVIL RIGHTS ERA
By the 1950s the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, headed by Marshall, secured the last of these goals through Brown v. Board of Education (1954), which outlawed segregation in public schools. NAACP’s Washington, D.C., bureau, led by lobbyist Clarence M. Mitchell Jr., helped advance not only integration of the armed forces in 1948 Civil Rights Acts of 1957, 1964, and 1968 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Despite such dramatic courtroom and congressional victories, the implementation of civil rights was a slow, painful, and oft times violent process. The unsolved 1951 murder of Harry T. Moore, an NAACP field secretary in Florida whose home was bombed on Christmas night, and his wife was just one of many crimes of retribution against the NAACP and its staff and members. NAACP Mississippi field secretary Medgar Evers and his wife Myrlie also became high-profile targets for pro-segregationist violence and terrorism. In 1962, their home was firebombed and later Medgar was assassinated by a sniper in front of their residence. Violence also met black children attempting to enter previously segregated schools in Little Rock, Arkansas, and other southern cities.
The Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s echoed the NAACP’s goals, but leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr., of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, felt that direct action was needed to obtain them. Although the NAACP was criticized for working too rigidly within the system, prioritizing legislative and judicial solutions, the Association did provide legal representation and aid to members of other protest groups over a sustained period of time. The NAACP even posted bail for hundreds of Freedom Riders in the ’60s who had traveled to Mississippi to register black voters and challenge Jim Crow policies.
Led by Roy Wilkins, who succeeded NAACP collaborated with A. Philip Randolph, organizations to plan the historic 1963 March on Washington. The following year, the Association accomplished what seemed an insurmountable task: the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Assisting the NAACP throughout the years were many celebrities and well-known leaders, including Sammy Davis Jr., Lena Horne, Jackie Robinson, Harry Belafonte. As an NAACP director of branches, Ella Baker stressed the importance of young people and women in the organization by recruiting members, raising money, and organizing local campaigns. Daisy Bates served as an NAACP national board member, Arkansas Little Rock Nine. NAACP stalwart Kivie Kaplan, a from Boston, served as president of the NAACP from 1966 until 1975, personally led nationwide NAACP Life Membership efforts, and fought to keep African Americans away from illegal drugs.
CLOSE OF THE FIRST CENTURY
As de facto racial segregation remained and job discrimination lingered and urban poverty and crime increased, NAACP advocacy and action remained critical for the Black community.
In 1977, Wilkins retired and was replaced by Benjamin L. Hooks – the first leader of the NAACP to be titled “executive director” instead of “executive secretary.” During his 15-year term, Dr. Hooks implemented many NAACP programs that continue today, such as Women in the NAACP and NAACP ACT-SO (Academic, Cultural, Technological and Scientific Olympics) competitions. Additionally, his term included the Bakke case (1978), in which a California court outlawed several aspects of affirmative action.
In the 1990s, NAACP struggled to find a leader who could replace the prolific Dr. Hooks. In 1993, Benjamin F. Chavis (now Chavis Muhammad) became executive director/CEO. In 1995, Myrlie Evers-Williams (widow of Medgar Evers) became the third woman to chair the NAACP, a position she held until she was succeeded by Chairman Emeritus Julian Bond in 1998. In 1996, the National Board of Directors selected Kweisi Mfume, a former congressman and head of the Congressional Black Caucus, to serve as president and CEO. In doing so, the board changed the name of the leadership position once more.
THE NEW MILLENNIUM
NAACP leaders and activists entered the 21st century reinvigorated and, in 2000, launched a massive get-out-the-vote campaign. As a result, 1 million more African Americans cast their ballots in the 2000 presidential election than in 1996.
Recent leaders have included Bruce S. Gordon, Benjamin Todd Jealous, Dennis Courtland Hayes, and Cornell William Brooks. Presently, Derrick Johnson serves as President and CEO, and Leon W. Russell serves as chairman of the National Board of Directors.
FIGHTING FORWARD
The real story of the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization lies in the hearts and minds of all those who refused to stand idly while race prejudice tarnished our nation. From bold investigations of mob brutality and protests of mass murders to testimony before congressional committees on the vicious tactics used to bar African Americans from the ballot box, it was the talent and tenacity of NAACP members that saved lives and laid the foundation upon which our fight for racial justice and equity is built.
While much of NAACP history is chronicled in books, articles, pamphlets, and magazines, the true movement lies in the faces of the multiracial, multigenerational army of ordinary people who united to awaken the consciousness of a people and a nation. With such a powerful membership base, all 2,200 chapters of the Association continue to persevere. Together, we will remain vigilant in our mission until the promise of America is made real for all.
We refuse to go back to the injustices of the past, so the NAACP is committed to create a future where justice, equity, and freedom are a reality for all.
(From the National NAACP page)