Mary Lockey, Alpha Phi, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

The Kappa Chapter of Alpha Phi was founded on May 20, 1899, eight years after Stanford University opened. A group of female students lived, along with a mother who was acting as a chaperone, in a cottage named Escondita, in a secluded corner of campus. The women and a few of their friends chose to petition Alpha Phi for a charter.

Mary Ishbel Lockey was one of the 14 charter members of Alpha Phi’s Kappa Chapter. The initiation was described in an 1899 Alpha Phi Quarterly:

The glow of wax candles indoors and the splendor of a California moon without may have lightened a little the traditional terrors of initiation, but it was with great earnestness that these new sisters pledged their word to the beloved order that they had talked of and worked for during many months. At last they could wear the dainty pins that had made the long overland journey from Beta and Iota.

That summer, Lockey, along with two chapter sisters, Bessie Henry and Marion Reynolds, did special work in biology at the Marine Laboratory at Pacific Grove.

In early 1900, the chapter members who were of age formed the Alpha Phi Hall Association. Its goal was to build a chapter house. Lockey was a member of the building committee, and ground was broken for the house at 17 Lasuen Street on June 1, 1900. Lockey graduated in 1902. Although she was raised in Montana, the chapter report stated she “will remain quite near us in California.”

When a Phi Beta Kappa chapter was established at Stanford on November 1, 1904, Lockey was the first Alpha Phi elected to membership.  In 1905, she “left the last of May for a trip to Boston, traveling through the south by way of New Orleans. She hopes to see as many Alpha Phis on her route as she can find with the aid of her directory.”

On March 7, 1908, 12 of the 26 charter members of Alpha Phi’s San Francisco Alumnae Chapter held their first meeting, and Lockey was elected the alumnae chapter’s first president.

Mary Lockey, Photo courtesy of the Palo Alto Historical Association

In 1911, the chapter correspondent noted, “One of the experiences which we have had lately was a trip to Palo Alto to be guests for the day at Castilleja School which is owned and conducted by Sister Mary Lockey.” She opened the school in 1907 and in 1910 purchased the land on which the school still stands. The “Five Cs.,” Castilleja’s core values are conscience, courtesy, character, courage, and charity.

Ad from the Alpha Phi Quarterly

May Hurlburt Smith, who was also a charter member of the Alpha Phi chapter, wrote about her visit to “Mary’s School” in a 1912 Quarterly:

The buildings (the residence and recitation hall) spread across the whole length of a block, generous and restful in their proportions and arrangement. I walked up the side street. The whole block was taken up by Castilleja; on one side the gymnasium and the tennis and basketball grounds where the girls have out-of-door sports every week in the year except vacations; on the other side the power house and the domestic science building and principal’s (that’s Mary) residence. The southern side of the block lay open to the sunshine, which filled the great patio formed by the buildings and was broken only by the shade of the fine live oaks growing here and there on the green turf. Under one of these trees was a group of girls and a dark-haired little lady, talking excitedly with peals of laughter—second year French class playing a word game! On a pergola porch and in other sunny or shady spots were girls studying, by ones, twos and threes—and I marvelled that they could keep their gaze from wandering over the tree tops to the melting blue skyline of the Santa Cruz Mountains, and staying there. Through a window I heard somebody practicing the piano, thoughtfully.

By the time I had walked around the block my surprise-shaken mind had composed itself into an attitude of humble respect for Sister Mary’s work. Through these three years of getting better acquainted with Castilleja, the respect has grown immensely, and now a thing would have to be just about plu-perfect for me to consider it ‘pretty good,  for Mary.’ So that I was not astounded at hearing President David Starr Jordan say a little while ago that there is no better school in the west than Castilleja.

I feel very strongly that in building up and maintaining a school like Castilleja. Mary Lockey has done a work which should make every one of us proud of her. Sometimes I am tempted to take all the credit of its excellence and award it in a lump to Alpha Phi, but I have to admit that the years Mary spent studying and travelling in America and Europe, before ever she came to Stanford, must have contributed something. Mary herself would be the first to attribute everything to the fraternity, for Alpha Phi holds the lead in her heart—at least we believe it does until in the stress of rushing we think we ought to get special privileges to help us win some Castilleja girl, and Mary sticks to her principles; then we understand she could not love us near so much, loved she not honor more.

The ideals of Castilleja show in every detail of its equipment and management. Throughout it is genuine, simple, modern and appropriate. If there is any one phase of the girls’ life which receives greater emphasis than others, I believe it is health. Outdoor living comes natural in this pleasant country, and the girls not only work and play out doors, but most of them sleep on the big sleeping porch at the rear of the third story.

For the occasional illness, Mary has provided an attractive ‘restroom,’ with its own bathroom and sunny porch—a room so planned and placed that in case of need it can be expanded into a suite reached by an outside stairway and absolutely sealed away from the rest of the building. This little isolation hospital Doctor Snow, the secretary of the California State Board of Health, has pronounced the most perfect of any private institution he knows. And just recently a girl had mumps there—caught on a visit home, not in Palo Alto, oh, mercy, no!—and no one else took it, though forty other girls in the residence were exposed.

Mary’s deep thoughtfulness and her insistence on the genuine show in so very many ways that it is hard to choose what side of her work to write about. That which interests me, individually, the most is the system by which she herself keeps watch over every side of every girl’s life at school. She regards as her most important duty a constant personal knowledge of the health, conduct, scholarship, recreations and tendencies of each girl, week by week. She accomplishes this by detailed report cards kept by teachers and housemother, monthly teachers’ meetings in which are discussed the possible causes of any marked change for the better or worse in any girl’s record, and frequent friendly consultations with each girl separately, in which praise, encouragement or criticism are dispensed as needed.

Lockey died in 1939. In 1941, her former student Margarita Espinosa, a Stanford Delta Gamma who had taught at the school since 1928, became Principal of the school. Espinosa served until 1971.

Castilleja is still educating young women in grades six through twelve. In 2010, the Lockey Alumnae House at 1263 Emerson Street was dedicated.

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Flora Richardson Colman, Pi Beta Phi, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

Almost six years after Pi Beta Phi was founded at Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois on April 28, 1867, the Kansas Alpha chapter at the University of Kansas was chartered.

Between the two dates, there were several other chapters founded including the chapter at Lombard College in Galesburg, Illinois, which was founded on June 22, 1872. Among the charter members of the Lombard chapter was Sara Richardson. Sara grew up in Wisconsin, but her family moved to Lawrence, Kansas in 1870. Sara’s sister, Flora, attended the University of Wisconsin and Lombard College for a short while, until she enrolled at Kansas University.

When Sara Richardson heard that a chapter of Beta Theta Pi was being formed at Kansas, she encouraged Flora, along with her other sisters, Alma and May, to form a chapter of Pi Beta Phi. The three Richardson sisters gathered a few friends and on April 1, 1873, the Kansas Alpha Chapter was established.

Flora Richardson (Colman) wearing her arrow

Flora was a junior when she enrolled at KU. She was a member of Oread Literary Society, and she collected bugs for what would be KU’s first entomological collection.

A member of the Class of 1873, she  graduated at the top of her class of four. She was the University’s first female graduate as well as its first valedictorian. The events leading up to the first KU graduation rivaled that of the well-established eastern schools. There was a Class Day celebration and Flora and two of the men gave orations. The third male graduate was an engineer and was excused from the oratory exercise. That evening the graduates were introduced and their biographies were read. The senior class, represented by Flora, passed the proverbial torch to the junior class, all of whom were on the stage. The commencement took place on June 11, 1873 and the festivities were held in the unfinished chapel.

Flora taught in Kanwaka, Kansas until she married Osgood Andrus Colman on Christmas Day 1875 at the home of her parents. She earned a master’s degree in 1876, the year her sister May graduated. Alma graduated in 1879. The Colmans had seven children – Alice, Nellie, Minnie, Fred, Clara, Asa, and Ralph. Many of the Colman’s descendants have been Jayhawks who can trace their  KU lineage to the first female graduate and valedictorian.

The Richardson sisters are forever connected to Pi Phi’s time-honored tradition, the Cookie Shine. It was at a reception to honor Sara Richardson for her help in establishing the KU chapter that Chancellor John Fraser called the event a “Cookie Shine.” The term spread like wildfire throughout the fraternity and has been a loved tradition among Pi Phis since that June night in 1873.

The Colmans lived in Lawrence, where Flora was involved in community organizations. When she died in 1924, her daughter Nellie wrote in her obituary:

There has been no movement for the benefit of her community or for women and children that did not receive her ardent support. Women’s suffrage, the women’s rest room, the various plans to provide high school privileges for rural pupils, and the farm bureau for rural women each in their turn were things she was untiring in her efforts to secure.

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Lucy Morgan, Alpha Sigma Tau, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

Lucy Calista Morgan grew up in North Carolina and was educated at a private school in Hickory, North Carolina. In 1915, she graduated from Central State Normal School (today it is Central Michigan University). While there, she became a member of the Beta Chapter of Alpha Sigma Tau. Morgan then taught in Illinois and worked for a time at the Chicago Children’s Bureau. While in Chicago, she studied at the University of Chicago.

In 1920, Morgan returned to North Carolina and took a job at the Appalachian School, which was founded by her brother Rufus, an Episcopalian minister.

Early in 1923, she visited Berea College in Kentucky and during her nine-week stay there she learned about weaving, other native crafts, and Berea’s off-campus community weavers. She purchased looms and headed back to North Carolina with an idea.

That idea, fostering a cottage industry to revive almost lost traditional arts such as weaving and woodcarving and to provide the residents of the mountain communities a way to earn a livelihood, turned into what is today the Penland School of Crafts, in Penland, North Carolina, in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Founded in 1925, it was incorporated in 1929. Nine years later, a board of trustees was formed to direct the institution. 

Morgan attended Alpha Sigma Tau’s 1946 convention at the Hotel Gibson in Cincinnati, Ohio. She was a speaker at the convention and she was the first winner of the Ada A. Norton Alumnae Award. The Penland School of Handicrafts was one of AST’s National Social Service Projects. She penned a letter to her chapter sisters, which later appeared in The Anchor.

Dear Betas,

Where were you during the Cincinnati Convention? Imagine my thrill when I got a letter from our National President asking me to go to the convention and tell the girls about Penland . . .The banquet was beautiful and the candlelight ceremony brought memories of my own initiation which I remember thinking was the most beautiful service I had ever seen.

I missed you sorely but I was right proud of our sorority, for, even without you, it was an impressive group. I liked their humor and gaiety and I liked very much the breadth of vision and the eagerness to serve beyond the bounds of the college campus. It was my first sorority meeting in thirty-one years.

Do you know that we are having an Alpha Sigma Tau Room at Penland? It is in our new stone building that replaces the one that was destroyed by fire. The first floor is dining room, kitchen and lounge and the second and third are sleeping quarters….We call this building the Pines because of the white pine trees back of the house

Fraternally, Lucy Morgan

Today Penland is “an international center for craft education dedicated to helping people live creative lives.” and it “offers one, two, and eight-week workshops in books, paper, clay, drawing, glass, iron, metals, photography, printmaking, letterpress, textiles, and wood. The school also offers artists’ residencies, local programs, and a gallery and information center.”

“Miss Lucy,” as she was known, retired as Penland’s director in 1962. She died in 1981 at the age of 92.

 

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Rowena Longmire, Chi Omega, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

The Rowena Longmire Building at Florida State University was the first building on the campus named for a faculty member. Rowena Longmire was an English professor and the founder of the Alumnae Association of the Florida State College for Women, which was the institution’s name when Longmire taught there. When the building opened it was called the Rowena Longmire Student Alumnae Building.

On April 18, 1908, Beta Rho, a three-year-old local organization at Florida State College for Women, became the Gamma Chapter of Chi Omega. Rowena Longmire was an alumna charter initiate of the chapter. She was a native of Palmyra, Missouri, and earned a teaching degree from Peabody Normal School in Nashville, Tennessee, and then a master’s degree from Florida State College for Women. She also had a Ph.B.  and A.M. degree from the University of Chicago. 

Gamma Chapter of Chi Omega, 1908, Rowena Longmire is third from the left in the top row of six women.

Early in its history, the chapter was proud to mention that she presented two addresses to state educational associations. She would go on to serve as president of the Florida Educational Association.

The February 1910 issue of The Eleusis contained a Founders’ Day toast written by Longmire.

During commencement week for the Class of 1916, Longmire entertained the chapter with an informal farewell party. White carnations, Chi Omega’s flower, were presented to the members. The February Eleusis told of a six o’clock dinner hosted by Longmire.

Longmire is on the right, circa 1915

A 1922 Eleusis boasted that “Miss Rowena Longmire, Gamma’s beloved active alumna, attended the University of Chicago this summer and will resume her place as an English instructor” in the fall.

In May of 1929, the Floridian Hotel was the scene of the senior banquet given by the Chi Omega chapter. Longmire, the faculty advisor, offered toasts to the seniors. Mrs. O.S. Lanier, the chapter’s chaperone and Longmire were entertained at a tea on April 4, 1930 at the chapter house. Longmire and Lanier were in the receiving line along with the chapter’s officers.

Rowena Longmire

An article in the September 18, 1938 Tallahassee Democrat was titled “Rowena Longmire Death is Deplored By Faculty Group.” The resolutions “expressing grief over the passing of Miss Rowena Longmire, member of the Florida state college faculty for 32 years, were adopted last week by the state college faculty at its first meeting of the new term.”  The resolutions called attention to her maintenance of “the highest ideals of scholarship and teaching, with unselfish devotion t the college and to the state.” The resolutions were:

Whereas Miss Rowena Longmire, during her long connection with the Florida State College for Women, has so lived and wrought that all many profit by the example of her character and ideals; and

Whereas she has constantly maintained the highest ideals of scholarship and teaching with unselfish devotion to the college and to the state; and

Whereas both professionally and personally she displayed such dignity, integrity, steadfastness of purpose, and loyalty to duty as to provide inspiration to both her students and colleagues and to show them the way of truth and of light; and 

Whereas the influence of her character no less than that of her work has been a building force of inestimable benefit to the college and through its alumnae to the entire state; and

Whereas she has steadfastly maintained a gallant spirit, youthful enthusiasm, and indomitable courage; and

Whereas her colleagues realize that hers was a unique place, which can not be filled;

Therefore be it resolved that the faculty of the Florida State College for Women hereby acknowledge our lasting indebtedness to her life, and our grief at her going.

In January 1939, the Chi Omegas placed a memorial plaque in the living room of the chapter house in memory of Longmire. Later that year, in April, the cornerstone of the Rowena Longmire building was laid. The building opened in the fall of 1940.

Rowena Longmire building

In late 1948, the Chi Omegas presented to the administration an oil painting of Longmire, and it was hung in the building bearing Longmire’s name. 

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Julia Bishop Coleman, Delta Zeta, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

As a student at Miami University, Julia Bishop (Coleman) was a founder of Delta Zeta. She graduated in 1904 and was her class vice president and poet. According to the Delta Zeta website, she kept a diary her entire life, and “she provided many of the stories about Delta Zeta’s first year that have been handed down for a century.” 

She had friends and family who lived in Iowa, the birthplace of P.E.O., and they were P.E.O.s. With their help, she was given permission to select 10 women to be charter members of the first P.E.O. chapter in Ohio, Chapter A in Loveland. It was organized in her home in June of 1911 and the 11 members were initiated by Edith Prouty (Prichard), Organizer of P.E.O.’s Supreme Chapter. It would take another seven years for a second Ohio chapter to be organized. 

After the P.E.O. chapter was founded in 1911, she married Dr. John McFerren Coleman. They had two daughters, Mary Permelia and Joan.

The Coleman Family. Mary Permelia was born in 1913 and Jean was born in 1916. Both daughters were Delta Zetas and both were initiated at Delta Zeta conventions. Jean was a P.E.O., too.

Coleman served on Delta Zeta’s National Council from 1920-26. Her first position was Historian. She then served as Vice President and finally as National President from 1924-26. She traveled to installations, conventions, state days, and other Delta Zeta events. In 1922, she installed the chapter at the University of Alabama. In 1923, she visited the Delta Zeta chapter at Kansas State University, and she was at the installation of the chapter at the University of Kentucky among other Delta Zeta celebrations.

In January of 1927, she was in attendance when a sundial was presented to Miami University to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Delta Zeta’s founding. She visited the chapter at the Florida State College for Women in Tallahassee and the Delta Zeta chapter there entertained in her honor.

It took about 15 years for Ohio to form the requisite number of P.E.O. chapters to charter a state chapter. In June of 1927, representatives from the nine P.E.O. chapters in Ohio discussed the formation of the Ohio State Chapter. On September 5, 1927, about 40 P.E.O. delegates and visitors met at Coleman’s home before heading to the home of Bessie Lee, President of Chapter A, Ohio, where the convocation was taking place. Julia Bishop Coleman was elected President of the Ohio State Chapter. She was reelected and served two terms in that position.

In 1946, she was in attendance when the Akron and Cleveland Alumnae Chapters of Delta Zeta held a dinner at the Lakeshore Hotel to celebrate the sorority’s 44th anniversary. A candlelight service paid tribute to the sorority’s founders. She was also the guest of honor at the monthly meeting of the Cincinnati Delta Zeta Alumnae Club. It was held at the University of Cincinnati’s Delta Zeta chapter house at 2811 Swiss Chalet Road. My guess is that she was a treasured guest at many Delta Zeta and P.E.O. celebrations and I suspect that these are but a small sampling of the events she attended.

Coleman died in 1959 at the age of 77. When a carillon was given to Miami University by Delta Zeta in October 1959, Dr. John Coleman, her widower, attended.

At Delta Zeta’s 1985 convention, a reproduction of Bishop’s diary was a favor given to the attendees. The hall on the second floor at the top of the main staircase at the Delta Zeta headquarters in Miami, Ohio, is the Julia Bishop Hall. A mirror, art, and other items belonging to Coleman are displayed in the hall.  

Julia Bishop Coleman, Delta Zeta Founder and P.E.O.

Fran’s note – I cannot write this post without giving a shout out to my Kappa Kappa Gamma friend Kylie Smith, who will be following in Julia Bishop Coleman’s footsteps when she begins her term as President of the Ohio State Chapter of P.E.O. at the conclusion of the Convention of Ohio State Chapter in early June 2018.


 

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Dr. Joyce Brothers, Sigma Delta Tau, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

March 25, 1917 is the date on which seven female Cornell University students founded Sigma Delta Tau. Their organization was originally called Sigma Delta Phi, but when the group discovered the name belonged to another Greek-letter organization they changed the “Phi” to “Tau.”

Sigma Delta Tau’s founders are Dora Bloom (Turteltaub), Inez Dane Ross, Amy Apfel (Tishman), Regene Freund (Cohane), Marian Gerber (Greenberg), Lenore Blanche Rubinow, and Grace Srenco (Grossman). Nathan Caleb House was the Ritualist.

One of Sigma Delta Tau’s most famous members was an initiate of the Alpha Chapter. On March 27, 1944, Joyce Bauer pledged Sigma Delta Tau. She was one of five pledges that spring, according to the April 7, 1944 Cornell Bulletin. She majored in home economics and psychology, graduating with honors in 1947. She started graduate school at Columbia University and earned a Master’s degree in 1949, the same year she married Milton Brothers.  In 1952, an American Fellowship from the American Association of University Women helped fund her as she wrote her doctoral dissertation. She graduated in 1953, the same year her only child was born. As a stay-at-home mom with a husband in medical residency, their finances were tight.

Dr. Joyce Brothers, 1950s

Dr. Joyce Brothers, 1950s

In 1955, the television quiz show, The $64,000 Question was popular. Brothers saw this as an opportunity to supplement the family’s meager income. Television personality Sonny Fox, on the PBS American Experience website, tells this story:

She went down originally and presented herself as a psychologist, and she had an expertise in something and, I’m not sure I remember what it was, but it certainly wasn’t boxing. And they said to her, ‘Well you’re wonderful as a personality but we’re looking for those dramatic juxtapositions.’ The marine officer who is an expert cook. The shoemaker who knows about opera. Those kinds of anomalies. That’s what we’re looking for. For instance, if you knew about boxing we’d…. She went home and — one thing you have to know about Joyce is she’s absolutely, she’s purposeful in her life. I mean, if she wants something she goes after it. And she wanted to be on this show and she started studying about boxing and she made herself into a boxing expert and she did not come on it as a boxing expert. She invented herself as a boxing expert. And she came on, she came back and said I’m a boxing expert. I’m a psychologist who knows about boxing. And they tested her and she did, and they put her on. Now the story that I understand, I’m not sure whether I got this from a prime source or a secondary source so I can’t be absolutely a hundred percent certain that I’m telling you the truth, but I think it is. At about $16,000 they thought they would knock her off. They didn’t think Joyce Brothers was building. So they asked her a particularly tough question, and she got it

So at $32,000 they decided really to get rid of Joyce, and this time instead of asking her questions about boxers they asked her a question about referees, which they knew she didn’t know anything about. But they underestimated Miss Brothers because she had been studying every week in-between and she knew about referees by the time they asked her about referees. And she got $32,064. And they said what the heck let her go. They went back to her strength and she hit. You know she hit $64,000 and she became quite famous as a result and she still is. She’s still writing her columns and everybody knows the name Joyce Brothers. So she really rode that one to stardom and fame.

Brothers became the second person, and the only female, to win the top prize. Two years later, she appeared on The $64,000 Challenge, and won that top prize, too. She parlayed her experiences on the quiz shows into a life-long career. The October 1, 1958 Cornell Alumni News reported on her activities, “Joyce Bauer Brothers, who did such a grand job on the $64,000 Question, now has her own television show. She is analyzing topics of interest to adults in a daily series on WRAC-TV.”

Her afternoon talk show, The Dr. Joyce Brothers Show, started as a local show and went into national syndication. Soon a late night show was added as well as a call-in radio show. A syndicated newspaper column and monthly magazine column followed as did several books.

When Milton Brothers died in 1989, his wife’s world was shattered. She wrote about her grief in what became her most popular book, Widowed; it was published in 1990. Brothers died on May 13, 2013.

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Mary McLeod Bethune, Delta Sigma Theta, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

In 1923, at Delta Sigma Theta’s fifth national convention, Mary McLeod Bethune, a prominent educator, became an Honorary member of Delta Sigma Theta.

The daughter of former slaves, Bethune worked in the fields at age five. Due to the generosity of a benefactor, she graduated from Scotia Seminary (now Barber-Scotia College). Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach, Florida can trace its history to 1904, when Bethune opened a school for African-American girls. There were five girls in the first class

Mary McLeod Bethune and some of her students during the early years of her school. Photo courtesy of Bethune-Cookman University.

In 1923, the school merged with the Cookman Institute of Jacksonville, Florida to become a high school. In 1931, it became a junior college. Ten years later Bethune-Cookman became a four-year college. Bethune served as the college president from 1923-42 and 1946-47. 

She was also a leader in the National Association of Colored Women and served as its national president. In addition, she founded the National Council of Negro Women and served as a Cabinet member in Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s administration.  Her push to upgrade the libraries at historically black institutions during her tenure as Director of the Negro Division of the National Youth Administration, and her firm belief that these libraries needed to be improved, played a part in Delta’s first national project.

On December 8, 1938, Bethune spoke in Massachusetts to a group of Alpha Kappa Alpha members at Boston’s Twelfth Baptist Church. Even though she was battling a cold, she kept the engagement and urged that “Minority groups should stick together or they’ll never get anywhere.”

On Sunday, January 24, 1954, the Gamma Zeta Sigma and Delta Alpha Chapters gathered at the Bethune-Cookman Auditorium in Daytona Beach, Florida, and had a Founders’ Day celebration. Mary McLeod Bethune introduced the speaker, Toki Schalk Johnson, women’s editor of the Pittsburgh Courier. Her talk was titled, “What Is the Fashion Today – Preparedness.”

Mary McLeod Bethune is to the right, seated on the right, at the 1954 Delta Sigma Theta Founders’ Day.

In an article in Ebony written shortly before her death when she knew her time was coming to a close, she “distilled principles and policies in which I believe firmly, for they represent the meaning of my life’s work.” Her legacy were these points, and in the article she added explanations:

I leave you love

I leave you hope

I leave you the challenge of developing confidence in one another

I leave you a thirst for education

I leave you a respect for the uses of power

I leave you faith

I leave you racial dignity

I leave you a desire to live harmoniously with your fellow men

I leave you finally a responsibility to our young people

She then added, “Faith, courage, brotherhood, dignity, ambition, responsibility – these are needed today as never before.”

Bethune died on May 18, 1955 at the age of 78. In 1993, she was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of Fame posthumously.

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Alice Babb Ewing, Alpha Xi Delta, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

I have written posts about the connection between P.E.O. and Alpha Xi Delta, and it’s a special story. The P.E.O. Sisterhood was founded on January 21, 1869, at Iowa Wesleyan University in Mount Pleasant, Iowa. Alpha Xi Delta was founded on April 17, 1893, at Lombard College in Galesburg, Illinois. Over the years, P.E.O. became a community organization and the sole remaining collegiate chapter at Iowa Wesleyan, Chapter S, Iowa,* became an anomaly within the organization. Anna Gillis (Kimble) lived in Mount Pleasant and was an Alpha Xi Delta at Lombard College. She helped facilitate the action that made P.E.O. a strictly community organization and Alpha Xi Delta, a national sorority. On June 9, 1902, Alpha Xi Delta’s Beta Chapter was installed at Iowa Wesleyan. The chapter had been the P.E.O. collegiate chapter.

In 1904, Alice Babb, the daughter of P.E.O. founder Alice Bird Babb, was initiated into P.E.O.’s Chapter A, Iowa (before it became known as Original Chapter A). She enrolled at Iowa Wesleyan University in the fall of 1905. She and her friend Mildred Brady were initiated into the Beta Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta on Friday, February 23, 1906. Alice’s mother celebrated the event by entertaining the Alpha Xi Delta members and pledges, along with their gentlemen friends, at the Babb’s home on March 10. It was a surprise birthday party for the younger Alice and “every one had a splendid time.”

Alice served as the chapter’s Quill of Alpha Xi Delta correspondent; for a 1906 issue she wrote about sorority expansion:

How proud we all are of Alpha Xi Delta! and why should we not be when the quill is worn by so many worthy girls in such worthy universities?

The time has come, far sooner than was dreamed, when we can carefully select the schools where chapters of Alpha Xi Delta shall be placed, and we can still more carefully maintain our ideal standard of womanhood in these schools.

But at the same time there is a great room for work, and for hard work. We are still young and our name is not so widely known as that of other sororities; so while we take for our motto ‘Quality not Quantity’ we must remember there are splendid schools from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and in many of them typical Alpha girls are waiting eagerly for some standard sorority to add their names to its ever-increasing roll.

In July 1906, the 16 members of the chapter received invitations to a house party at the Richland, Iowa, home of Mildred, Lucile, and Louise Brady. Alice Babb’s report in The Quill gave this account of the activities:

The second floor of the hospitable home had been vacated for our use, and here we bunked, holding midnight revels and exchanging confidences until the wee small hours of the morning.

What glorious days those were, and why should they not have been with such perfect weather, such congenial girls and such unlimited hospitality to make them so?

Each day we were invited to the home of some Alpha sister or college friend who chanced to live in the vicinity, wither for a meal or to spend the afternoon ro evening. One of our favorite pastimes at these gathering was to get up impromptu theatricals, and by the end of the week we were in such perfect training that I doubt if the scenes both comic and tragic could be surpassed on any stage.

When no other recreation was afforded, the piano and our local Alpha song books were always ready; never were songs sung with such spirit and enthusiasm as those. I am sure that it was with a feeling of envy that the passerby heard the merry voices with which theirs could not join.

Today that July week is but a memory and is stored away in our minds with many of the other happening of a student’s life, yet I speak the sentiments of sixteen g when I say that it will ever hold a prominent place among these recollections both for the good time’s sake and for an example of true hospitality.

While she was enrolled at Iowa Wesleyan, the Babbs moved to Aurora, Illinois. Perhaps this entered into the decision to transfer to Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. The November 1907 Quill of Alpha Xi Delta reported that young Alice was enrolled at Northwestern, but she spent Thanksgiving week with her Alpha Xi sisters at Iowa Wesleyan. A chapter meeting was held the day after Thanksgiving and it was “the best we have had for some time. Alice Babb of Aurora was one of the present sisters.”

Alice Babb is fourth from the left in the middle row in this photo of a Northwestern University literary society.

Martha Foote Crow, a founder of Alpha Phi, was a patroness of the senior sorority at Northwestern University.

Alice Babb had an article published in the Northwestern Magazine during the 1907-08 academic year.

Alice included her Alpha Xi membership in her class listing even though there would not be a chapter at Northwestern until 1921.

When Iowa Wesleyan’s class of 1909 graduated, she was in Mount Pleasant for the June 14, 1909, festivities. She was there when the chapter entertained the alumnae and patroness at the home of Florence Stephen. And she visited her friends May Johnson and Mabel Duncan during commencement and the weeks which followed it. The chapter report noted, “Alice Babb was undecided as to what she will direct her energies” as a Northwestern graduate.

In 1909, she attended a Panhellenic luncheon in Chicago and she was in Mount Pleasant for the P.E.O. Convention in October 1909. She visited with the chapter during that visit.

On Feb 11, 1910, the Alpha Xi chapter held an initiation ceremony at Mabel Duncan’s home. A “spread” followed and The Quill reported, “the alumnae present were Alice Babb of Aurora and Lucile Brady of Richland, Iowa.” 

When Iowa Wesleyan alumni met in Chicago in 1913, she was among the guests who attended. Even though she did not graduate from Iowa Wesleyan, she kept up her connections to Mount Pleasant and the institution.

When a bronze tablet was place in the music room in Iowa Wesleyan’s Old Main in 1917, Alice Babb was in attendance and helped with the unveiling.

On September 11, 1918, Alice Babb married Donald Ewing, “a brilliant chemist of Aurora,” according to the chapter’s report in The Quill.

Only one P.E.O. founder, Alice Bird Babb, became a member of Alpha Xi Delta. The initiation took place in 1924, when she was 74 years old. Perhaps her daughter-in-law, Vida Kemble Babb, wife of Max Babb, was there, too. Vida, an 1895 graduate of Iowa Wesleyan and a member of the P.E.O. chapter there, became an alumna initiate of Alpha Xi in 1913.** 

When the cornerstone was laid for the P.E.O. Memorial Library in 1927, Ewing was in attendance, too, and placed the deed to the library of her parents, Alice Bird and Washington Irving Babb, into the box. In 1929, when the iconic portraits of the seven P.E.O. founders were unveiled, she was there.

1932-33 Northwestern Alumni News

On February 2, 1942, she spoke to Chapter A, Illinois, as at meeting at the Palmer House in Chicago. Ewing’s topic was the “P.E.O. Founders and Education.”

Mount Pleasant News, May 22, 1948

A February 22, 1951 issue of the Mount Pleasant News carried a report about the Ramblers; they were a loosely knot group of former Mount Pleasant residents. Ewing sent a letter telling of her club work. Her long-time friend, Lillian Rogers, read the letter. Ewing was closely following the movements of the newly formed United Nations. The newspaper account added, “Alice is so retiring, she would never mention her fine reputation as a lecturer on many subjects, but the truth is known among her old-time friends.”

Alice Babb Ewing died in 1983 at the age of 95.

*Chapter S, Iowa,  had been Chapter AJ before State Chapters were established.

** The wife of Alice Bird Babb’s son Miles was a Pi Beta Phi at Iowa Wesleyan if anyone is keeping score.

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Dr. Olga Neymann, Kappa Alpha Theta, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

Olga Neymann was born in 1860 in Janesville, Wisconsin. Her parents took her abroad when she was very young. She attended schools in Switzerland and Germany as well as Miss Anna Brackett’s private school in New York City. She earned a bachelors in literature at Cornell University. On January 29, 1881, Kappa Alpha Theta’s Iota Chapter was chartered at Cornell and she was one of its three founding members. Her time as a collegiate member was relatively short as she graduated later that year.

The charter members of the Kappa Alpha Theta chapter at Cornell University

Neymann had hoped to attend dental school in NYC, but women were not accepted there, so she enrolled in the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery in Philadelphia. She earned her D.D.S. in 1886.

Good Housekeeping, 1889

Dental Cosmo, 1892

On October 24, 1893, she married Carol Glucksmann. An article which appeared in many newspapers around the world in 1899, called her “the feminine pioneer of her profession in New York city, where she established herself more than half a dozen years ago. Modest and retiring shrinking from attracting any undue publicity, she has pursued her vocation in the face of the prejudice and opposition with which a woman usually contends when she enters a path of labor untrodden by sister workers, with courage, industry and perseverance, united to ability. She now commands an extensive and increasing practice that cannot fail to be gratifying to herself and encouraging women to how her example.”

A daughter Vanessa was born in 1894. When asked why she chose dentistry as a profession, the article stated “she considered it an excellent field for intelligent and industrious women who are compelled to earn an independence and one of the higher callings that enables a woman to pursue a vocation and superintend a home under the same roof – a union that to one who possesses her fondness for a domestic life presents irresistible attractions.”

She attended Cornell’s 1907 Commencement.

She was a member of the First District Dental Association of New York, the Woman’s Dental Association of Philadelphia, and a myriad of other organizations.

Her husband died in 1913. In 1916, she attended her 35th class reunion at Cornell. The May 3, 1923 Cornell Alumni News reported she was “a teacher of speech improvement, in charge of the correction of all speech defects, such as stammering, lisping, etc., in the speech clinic of the Department of Neurology, Cornell Medical College, New York, and the clinic of speech defects, Bellevue Hospital, New York, and teacher of speech improvement in the Children’s Hospital, Randall’s Island, New York.”

Olga Neymann Glucksmann died in 1927.

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Dr. Janet Pierson Cooper, ZTA, #WHM2018, #notablesororitywomen

Janet Pierson Cooper was born in Nova Scotia, Canada, in 1891. At the age of 16, she went to Boston hoping to be a nurse, but she was rejected because of her age. She was hired as a companion for Dudley Page’s daughter, a diabetic. She lived with the Page family in Stoneham, Massachusetts. After his daughter’s death, Page encouraged Cooper to pursue medical studies and he made the offer to pay for her expenses.

She enrolled at Boston University School of Medicine to become a homeopathic physician, and there she became a member of Zeta Tau Alpha. Cooper earned a bachelor’s degree in 1916 and her medical degree in 1917.

When she heard of an opportunity to be a resident at the Melbourne Homeopathic Hospital in Australia, she applied and was accepted. It was to be a three-term.

When she arrived in October 1917, she was the hospital’s first female physician. On October 22, 1918, she married Robert Jensen.

In the November 1921 Themis, signing her letter, “Yours in ZTA, Janet Cooper Jenson,” she told of her life in Australia:

After three years as resident at the Melbourne Homeopathic Hospital last November I began private practice plus housekeeping. The two work in very well as when practice is busy the housekeeping waits and when practice is dull the housekeeping is a vent for surplus energy and depressed spirits. Even so, I am very happy busy although a long way from home, but that doesn’t matter for the world is much the same everywhere. There are numbers of Americans or exiles, as they term themselves, in Melbourne and it is very pleasant occasionally to discuss among ourselves how we would run Australia along Yankee lines to which the Aussie being usually an Englisher does not take very kindly. Australians on the whole take life much easier than the Americans.

She ended with an offer of hospitality to any visiting sorority sister:

Any Zeta who decides to see this part of the Southern Hemisphere may be sure of an interesting experience and it would be a pleasure for me to show her Melbourne. I appreciate receiving Themis and am sorry I have not contributed earlier. The Boston Alumnae notes always bring on an attack of nostalgia, but I read and reread them just the same.

Robert Jensen died in 1934. On April 6, 1939, she married Frank Swifte. She had two daughters, one of whom was adopted, and she was a “lively grandmother,” according to a 1958 newspaper article.

Professionally, she used her maiden name. She was a dedicated physician and anesthesiologist, and she was active in many community and charitable organizations including the League of Women Voters and the Business and Professional Women’s Club.

In 1950, Cooper was elected to the South Melbourne City Council, the first woman to hold the position. She lost reelection in 1953, but was successful in her 1956 attempt to regain the seat. She served as  mayor in 1958-59 and again in 1965.

Cooper died on June 6, 1984.

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