Insley, Virginia

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1912

Biographical notes:

Virginia Insley, medical social worker, was born Ruth Marie Henze on Jan. 2, 1912, in Portland, Oregon, the daughter of Adele Henze and a father who abandoned them. In February 1913 AH "voluntarily surrendered the said child to the care and custody of The Baby Home" (see #1). In March 1913 Fannie (Brazee) and Morton H. Insley, a "travelling agent," of Portland, adopted her and changed her name to Virginia Insley.

In 1929 VI graduated from St. Helen's Hall, a private school, and went on to the University of Washington in Seattle, where she majored in sociology and was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. The Depression, and the death of her father, made it impossible for her to go straight to graduate school. Even before she received her BA (1934), VI had embarked on the long and successful social work career, dedicated to maternal and child health, reflected in the following chronology.

1933 1941: Volunteer, Oregon State Welfare Commission Unpaid caseworker, Multnomah County Emergency Relief Administration Interviewed workers, Works Progress Administration Portland Art Museum information desk Sales and purchasing, bookstore/lending library Board member: Portland YWCA, Council of Social Agencies, Mental Hygiene Society Member, Junior League 1941: Entered Graduate School of Social Work, University of Washington 1942 1944: Medical Social Consultant, Washington State Department of Health Taught sociology to undergraduate nursing students 1944 1949: Supervisor, Social Service Department, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston 1949: Received MSW 1949 1952: Chief Social Worker, Richmond (Va.) Department of Public Health Taught at Medical College of Virginia, College of William and Mary 1952 1955: Regional Medical Social Consultant, U.S. Children's Bureau, San Francisco 1955 1969: Chief, Medical Social Work Section, U.S. Children's Bureau, Washington, D.C. (succeeded Edith M. Baker; see Schlesinger Library collection MC 415 1969 1973: Chief, Medical Social Work Section, Maternal and Child Health Services, U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS), Rockville, Md. 1973 1980: Chief, Medical Social Work, Bureau of Community Health Services, USPHS, Rockville, Md. 1980: Retired, honored at many conferences and by many institutions and organizations Colleagues gave publications and money in honor of VI to the School of Social Work Library, University of Washington 1991: VI established VI Fund, Syracuse University School of Social Work (SUSSW) 1992: Named to Board of Visitors, SUSSW 1993: First annual VI Lecture, University of Maryland School of Social Work, given by Gloria Johnson-Powell

During these busy years VI continued her education by attending courses at the Boston Psychoanalytic Institute, National Institute of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University and other institutions; and contributed chapters to books and articles to professional journals. She also was and continues to be a panelist and speaker at workshops and conferences, a charter member of National Association of Social Workers, a Fellow of the American Public Health Association, and an active member of other professional organizations. VI is a supporter of the arts, community service organizations, political candidates, and the National Organization for Women.

In 1989 VI gave material related to the Brazee and Insley families to the Oregon Historical Society.

The George Arents Research Library for Special Collections at the Bird Library, Syracuse University also holds material donated by VI: VI monographs (1951-1982, scattered), writings by others (1940-1990, n.d., scattered), correspondence, others to others (1948-1950, 1977, 1980), and approximately 200 volumes on maternal and child health care. A preliminary listing of this material is available in #190.

More biographical information is available in this collection. (see #1-44).

From the guide to the Papers, 1902, 1913-1994, (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute)

Virginia Insley (1912-2003) was an American social worker known for her steadfast promotion of high standards in social work education and practice in maternal and child health programs. She worked for the U.S. Children's Bureau as chief of the medical social services section, Division of Maternal and Child Health Services, a position she held for more than 20 years.

From the guide to the Virginia Insley Papers, 1949-1998, (Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries)

A medical social worker, Virginia Insley graduated from the University of Washington (B.A., M.S.W.) and worked for nearly thirty years for the federal government, serving finally as chief of medical social work in the Bureau of Community Health Services, U.S. Public Health Service.

From the description of Papers, 1902-1994 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232007588

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Subjects:

  • Adoptees
  • Adoptees
  • Child health services
  • Medical education
  • Home care services
  • Maternal health services
  • Medical social work
  • Mental retardation
  • Politics, government and public administration
  • Public health personnel
  • Teenage mothers
  • Voyages and travels
  • Adoptees

Occupations:

  • Consultants
  • Social workers

Places:

  • Virginia--Richmond (as recorded)
  • Boston (Mass.)-Social conditions (as recorded)
  • Boston (Mass.) (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)