Founding The
Mexican Revolution forced many refugees into
San Antonio,
Texas. Women and children in particular showed dire need for assistance.
Florence Terry Griswold decided to help by opening her home to these refugees and gathering friends to provide relief in the form of food, health clinics, and English classes. Griswold recognized that women can and should set examples for the men in their lives. She believed that women are more inclined to be nurturing and understanding, and are therefore essential to improving relations between people. It was her understanding that an
apolitical and
nonsectarian, with no commercial purpose nor alignment with any national government could help build bridges between nations that businessmen and politicians were unable to foster due to their motivations. She thought that if she could bring women together in a nonpolitical effort to aid the women and children of the
Americas, and build cross cultural understanding and friendship, men would follow suit. On October 16, 1916, Griswold the inaugural meeting at the
Menger Hotel, the charter members, besides Griswold were Mary Burleson Bee (
Mrs. Carlos);
Ella Dancy Dibrell (Mrs. Joseph Burton Dibrell);
Anna Hertzberg (Mrs. Eli Hertzberg);
Olivia Nolte (Mrs. Walter Nolte);
Mary Pancoast (Mrs. Aaron C. "A. C." Pancoast); among others. PART had many sources of inspiration. For one, there was Pan Americanism, the economic and cultural cooperation of the nations of the Americas. It was modeled after the
Pan American Union where each of the 21 American countries is represented by at least one member, and members elect a General Director every few years. There was also King Arthur’s
roundtable, a table in which there is no head, representing the equality of all members. And the motto “One for all and all for one” is sourced from
The Three Musketeers representing mutual dedication and support from the individual to the social scale.
Expansion Griswold served as the first director and in 1921, the second chapter opened in
Laredo and later that same year,
Eugenia Schuster opened the branch in
El Paso. In 1922, the chapter in
Austin, as well as the state organization were founded. Griswold founded the state organization and became the first State Director to coordinate the activities of the various branches. Round Tables in other countries followed with the first branch established in
Mexico City in 1928. In 1936,
Ángela Acuña de Chacon founded the first branch in
Costa Rica at
San Jose and the following year, the
Dallas chapter was founded by
Katherine S. Robinson (Mrs. Stone J. Robinson). In the early 1940s,
Emma Gutiérrez Suárez joined the Mexican branch. She would later become the chapter's National Director. Upon Griswold's death in 1941, Robinson became the State Director and Nolte proposed that a scholarship, named in Griswold's honor be granted annually for young
Latin American women wanting to further their education in the United States to enable them give back to their home country upon completion of their schooling. In 1944 the international body, the Alliance of Pan American Round Tables () was founded in Mexico City with Robinson as the first international Director General. By 1946 a
Cuban branch had been formed and by the time of the organization's fiftieth anniversary, there had been chapters created in all of the countries of the Americas except, Canada, Haiti and Venezuela. == Work ==