YWCA GLENDALE AND PASADENA HAS BEEN ELIMINATING RACISM AND EMPOWERING WOMEN IN OUR COMMUNITY FOR OVER 95 YEARS.
1920s
Wanting full access to a recreational facility in Glendale, California, fifteen of the community’s prominent women founded YWCA Glendale in 1926 to promote health and wellness among the city’s women and girls.
1930s
During the depression, emergency relief became a principal activity for YWCA Glendale. In 1933 alone, we provided over 400 meals and 81 free beds to women and girls in economic crisis. By 1934, YWCA Glendale created two permanent residences for single women. That same year, we created a summer camp program.
1940s
YWCA Glendale acquired the building at 735 East Lexington Drive, which has been our location ever since. At the time, the building housed 30 women, with a commissary and a health education program.
1950s-1960s
By the mid-1950s, YWCA Glendale was an established and well-known community center for women and girls, having served over 15,000 girls in 1956 alone. In 1969, we officially closed our residency program and turned our focus toward promoting health and safety in the Glendale community.
1970s
YWCA Glendale joined the national movement to address and end domestic violence by opening an emergency shelter for survivors in 1979. Sunrise Village, which still runs today, is a 45-day emergency shelter for families in crisis due to domestic violence. Through donations and grants, all residents receive food, clothing, and supportive services while staying with us.
1980s
With the national domestic violence movement gaining momentum, our programs grew exponentially. We expanded our Domestic Violence Program to include a Children’s Program and a Domestic Violence Service Center, which continues to provide crisis intervention, case management, legal services, individual and group counseling, and community referrals to survivors in the greater Los Angeles area.
1990s
Initially passed in 1994, the Violence Against Women Act created the first U.S. federal legislation acknowledging domestic violence and sexual assault as crimes, and provided federal resources to encourage community-coordinated responses to combating violence. With this funding we were able to expand our programs even further.
2010s
In 2010 we started Camp Y, which provided enrichment activities for children in the Glendale community. In 2018 we started Camp Rosie: Girls on the Rise, which focuses on STEAM Education and healthy relationship workshops for girls. In 2019, we began offering TechGYRLS programming, providing girls with Google CS first coding camps.
By 2014, YWCA Glendale was a keystone in the movement to end domestic violence in Glendale, developing partnerships with local community and government agencies. In October of 2014, we hosted our first candlelight vigil, honoring those who had lost their lives to domestic violence and celebrating the work our community has done in the field.
In 2017, we launched a Domestic Violence Housing First Program to include housing and homelessness prevention services, creating an opportunity to help survivors transition from homelessness to permanent, safe housing.
2020s
In 2020, YWCA Glendale responded to the local impacts of the COVID-19 global pandemic, quickly transitioning all of our Domestic Violence Resource Center programs to tele-health platforms, while continuing to operate our emergency shelter as an essential service provider. We also launched a new curbside grocery pick up program to address the food insecurity accelerated by the pandemic.
Girls’ Empowerment Programs went virtual and expanded to include Girls’ Circle, an after-school program, and new TechGYRLS’ workshops on coding, robotics, and circuitry.
In response to our community’s call for racial justice following the murder of George Floyd, we formed the Coalition for an Anti-Racist Glendale to drive systemic change and advance racial equity in our community.
In 2021, after a year of jointly producing Girls’ Empowerment Programs with YWCA Pasadena-Foothill Valley, both organizations officially joined forces to streamline operations and programming, under YWCA Glendale’s leadership. As the parent organization in the new subsidiary structure, YWCA Glendale changed its name to YWCA Glendale and Pasadena in March 2021.