How to stay friends for 50 years? Ask the women of Sugar Hill.

From left, Joyce Wynn Dawkins, Linda Evans Cheek and Elizabeth Gholston visit the inside of Elkton Hall earlier this month for the first time since the 1970s. David Carter for The Washington Post

Credit: for The Washington Post

Credit: for The Washington Post

From left, Joyce Wynn Dawkins, Linda Evans Cheek and Elizabeth Gholston visit the inside of Elkton Hall earlier this month for the first time since the 1970s. David Carter for The Washington Post

They got ready for parties and shared countless laughs as freshmen inside the cramped rooms of Elkton Hall, a high-rise dormitory at the University of Maryland at College Park. They bonded over being Black women at a university where, in 1971, Black students made up only 4% of the student body.

Friends dubbed the tightknit group of young women “Sugar Hill,” and the name stuck. “It was unique for that many African American females to be in one place,” said Elizabeth Gholston, 71, one of the early members of the group who now resides in Northwest Washington. “During that time, you needed that kind of camaraderie and cohesiveness.”

On Dec. 14, 1973, the women, most of them college seniors, gathered to celebrate a birthday and an early graduation. But it wasn’t the end of the friend group. Before the evening was over, they had decided that the group should meet again in December the following year. They never imagined where the new tradition would take them.

For the past 50 years, the women have continued to meet at least once a year for dinners, weekend sleepovers and vacations around the world. The Sugar Hill Sisterhood, as they now call themselves, has expanded to 16 women who have leaned on one another through five decades of milestones – weddings and graduations, baby showers and funerals.

There’s no challenge too big for the sisterhood, said Everene Johnson-Turner, 71, who now lives in Columbia, Maryland, and attended the first December dinner. “I could call in the troops in a minute,” she said. “They would be there for me.”

Lasting friendships and traditions

The enduring nature of female friendship has been well documented. Research shows that female friendships tend to be deeper than those of men, and women are more likely to rely on friends in addition to their spouses for support, said Marisa Franco, an assistant clinical professor at the University of Maryland and author of “Platonic: How the Science of Attachment Can Help You Make – and Keep – Friends.”

While many people have friendships that span decades, the women of Sugar Hill are something of a case study in what it takes to maintain them. Although the bond among the women of Sugar Hill was forged during their college years, they say they have worked hard to stay connected and nurture their relationships. A daily WhatsApp group chat helps them stay in touch, as do phone calls, video chats and remote group activities like a 90-day fitness challenge. They are committed to their annual reunions and have maintained unwavering support for one another.

“The character of all the women in this group is top-notch,” said Jonetta Hill, 71, who now lives in the Virgin Islands. “People are in awe that all these women in all these years, we haven’t had a fight, we haven’t had a breakup or anything like that. We respect each other’s individuality.”

While the Sugar Hill reunions began with annual dinners, they later evolved to overnight stays at one another’s houses and then trips together around the world. The women say that whatever is going on in their lives, they can look forward to spending time with the Sugar Hill Sisterhood every December.

The Sugar Hill Sisterhood has toured the world together, with trips to Jamaica, Spain, Italy, the Bahamas, Mexico, the United Arab Emirates, Brazil, Argentina and Portugal, among many other places. In December, the group marked the 50th anniversary of the December reunions with a trip to Grenada.

“These trips are meaningful because for a lot of years that was the only vacation I had,” said Cassandra Stewart, a 71-year-old who lives in Baltimore. “We have the best time ever, and it really sets the tone for my year. When I’m with them, it’s going to be nothing but good times.”

To make sure the trips and reunions keep happening, the group each year designates someone who is responsible for selecting the location, figuring out the transportation and planning the activities. That person can organize the trip by themselves or in a committee with a few other women. Hosts are selected based on a rotation, and before the reunion is over, it is determined who will plan the following year. Once the destination is decided, there are no complaints.

“It’s an unspoken agreement to not say anything discouraging about the choice of location,” said Linda Evans Cheek, 72, of Hyattsville, who also lived in Elkton Hall during her college years. “If you want to go somewhere when it’s your turn, we’ll go there.”

The reunion coordinator will send a notice in mid-March or early April about the destination of the trip along with an estimate of the total cost, said Joyce Wynn Dawkins, 71, a former Elkton Hall resident who lives in Laurel, Maryland. Planning ahead is part of the fun.

“The really key thing I loved about it was the excitement that nobody knew what they were going to do until the invitations went out,” Dawkins said.

Joyce Wynn Dawkins holds a photo showing some of the Sugar Hill women. The group has been on adventures around the world. David Carter for The Washington Post

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Credit: for The Washington Post

A lasting identity

The group continues to debate the origins of their name. Several said they believe it was started by male friends on campus. “Sugar” was a term of endearment toward the women, while “hill” referred to the fact that they lived on the top floor of Elkton Hall. “It was all girls, and we were supposed to be all sweet sisters,” said Angie Page, 71, of Ellicott City, Maryland. “Sugar is sweet and we were young ladies up there.”

Group members say their name has become part of their identity and now extends to family members. Husbands are referred to as “sugar daddies,” Johnson-Turner said. Children are “sugar babies,” and grandchildren are “sweet tarts.”

“Everything we call our families have to do with sugar,” said Johnson-Turner.

The Sugar Hill friendships now span generations. The friends support one another’s children and grandchildren, and the children of the sisterhood also spend time together. “It’s a great feeling knowing that we’ve passed the Sugar Hill legacy to our offspring and they are passing it down to their offspring,” Dawkins said.

And when Dawkins got married in 1985, Cheek’s husband explained to her fiancé that his commitment extended beyond his fiancée. “Just make sure you want to do this,” Dawkins recalls him saying at the time. “You’re marrying her, but you’re marrying 15 other sisters as well.”

“He was laughing,” Dawkins said, “but he was right.”

The women in the Sugar Hill Sisterhood bonded in part because they were all Black women on a campus where Black students made up only 4 percent of the student body. David Carter for The Washington Post

Credit: for The Washington Post

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Credit: for The Washington Post