Northwestern Law Announces New Scholarship Recognizing African American History and Culture

02.28.2019

Diversity & Inclusion Students
From left to right: Andrew M. Stroth (JD ’99), Wesley Morrissette (JD ’14), Jared Bartie(JD ’93), Dean Kim Yuracko, Rita Fry (JD ’79), and David Rone (JD ’87) at a Februarycelebration announcing the scholarship.
From left to right: Andrew M. Stroth (JD ’99), Wesley Morrissette (JD ’14), Jared Bartie(JD ’93), Dean Kim Yuracko, Rita Fry (JD ’79), and David Rone (JD ’87) at a Februarycelebration announcing the scholarship.

The Northwestern Pritzker School of Law announced today a first-of-its-kind scholarship, which will be awarded annually to outstanding students who demonstrate interest in, or commitment to, African American history and culture.

The Law School has received commitments totaling $400,000 from a group of African American alumni to launch the historic initiative, which will be known as the African American History and Culture Endowed Scholarship. “The African American History and Culture Endowed Scholarship will enhance the Law School’s efforts to recruit to diversify our student body and foster an inclusive and socially engaged academic community,” Dean Kimberly Yuracko said in a letter to the Law School community.

On February 28, the final day of Black History Month, Northwestern Law students, alumni, faculty and staff will gather in the Atrium to celebrate the new scholarship, which was generously funded by Jared Bartie (JD ’93), Sharon Bowen (JD ’82), Toni Bush (JD ’81), Rita Fry (JD ’79), Gail Hasbrouck (JD ’76), John Palmer (JD ’09), Wesley Morrissette (JD ’14), David Rone (JD ’87), and Andrew M. Stroth (JD ’99). “There is a recognition of the importance of diversity in the legal community, and we have to break down as many barriers as possible to getting a good education and being ready for opportunities in the legal community,” Hasbrouck says.

Each of the founding members of the scholarship were active members of the Black Law Students Association (BLSA) during their time on campus. Nnenna Onyema, the 2018-2019 BLSA president, says the scholarship speaks to the power of community. “The BLSA community is blown away by the generosity of our African American alumni community,” she says. “We know from experience that for African American students, the financial burden of law school is, at best, a very present source of stress for current students, and at worst, a barrier to entry for the faces we will not ever meet.”

This new gift is the latest in the Law School’s $250M Motion to Lead campaign, which has raised over $240M to date and includes nearly 40 new scholarships. Individuals interested in donating to this historic initiative can designate a gift to the African American History and Culture Scholarship.