Link Margaret Hawkins

Link Margaret Hawkins was born Margaret Josephine Roselle on January 12, 1908, in Philadelphia.  She was the younger of two daughters of David and Anna Roselle.  While attending the Philadelphia High School for Girls, her innate artistic talent was discovered and she entered the special program in the field of art.  However, she is probably best remembered at Girls’ High for leading her Black classmates in a determined effort to attend the annual and, at that time, all-white senior prom.  Rather than yield to the pressure for an integrated prom, school officers cancelled the affair.

This Co-founder and Second National President of The Links was graduated from Girls’ High in January 1927, and entered Philadelphia Normal School the following month.  In June of that year, the Philadelphia Board of Education awarded her a four-year scholarship to the Women’s School of Design, later known as the Moore Institute of Art.  After graduating in 1931, she was appointed to teach art in the Camden, New Jersey schools.  There she soon became one of the city’s demonstration teachers in art techniques. 

On May 13, 1933, she married Frederick C. Hawkins.  She was the mother of two sons, Frederick, Jr., and Bruce Roselle Hawkins.   When Saint Thomas Episcopal Church in Philadelphia was rebuilt after a devastating fire, Link Hawkins painted twelve pictures depicting the Stations of the Cross, which were hung in the Church as a permanent memorial to her parents.  This talented, creative woman not only served as the first president of the founding chapter, but she designed the Links bracelet. She was a member of the Eastern Arts Association, the National Arts Association, and the New Jersey Teachers Association.  She was active in “Jack and Jill,” the Mother’s Study Club, the Sunday Niters, and the Dealers. 

Link Hawkins was elected second national president of The Links at the Fifth Assembly in Buffalo in 1953.  It was during her term in the National office that the now famous Links-NAACP life membership program was begun.  Seeds of national programs were carefully nurtured during her tenure, and because of the rapid increase in the number of chapters, certain areas were reorganized.  Link Margaret Hawkins died on October 4, 1963.

 


 
Past Presidents

Link Sarah Strickland Scott
1st National President
1957-1961
Link Margaret Hawkins
2nd National President
1957-1961
Link Pauline Weeden Maloney
3rd National President
1957-1961
Link Vivian J. Beamon
4th National President
1962-1966
Link Helen Gray Edmonds
5th National President
1970-1974
Link Pauline Ellison
6th National President
1974-1978
Link Julia Brogdon Purnell
7th National President
1978-1982
Link Dolly Desselle Adams
8th National President
1982-1986
Link Regina Jollivette Frazier
9th National President
1986-1990
Link Marion Elizabeth Schultz Sutherland
10th National President
1990-1994
Link Patricia Russell-McCloud
11th National President
1994-1998
Link Barbara Dixon Simpkins
12th National President
1998-2002

The Links, Incorporated
1200 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20005
202-842-8686
www.linksinc.org

The Links, Incorporated is a not-for-profit organization of more than 10,000 women of color, committed to enhancing the quality of life in our communities