Mary Melinda (Kingsbury) Simkhovitch, 1867-1951

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Mary Melinda (Kingsbury) Simkhovitch:

Mary Melinda (Kingsbury) Simkhovitch, settlement worker and housing reformer, was born on September 8, 1867, in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. She was the first of two children born to Laura Davis (Holmes) (1839-1932) and Isaac Franklin Kingsbury (1841-1919).

MKS graduated from Newton High School in 1886 and received her B.A. from Boston University, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, in 1890. While in college she did volunteer work in a teenage girls' club at St. Augustine's Episcopal Church, a Black congregation, and at "St. Monica(s Home for old colored women." These experiences influenced her later decisions to continue her studies in economics and political science and her choice of a career in settlement work. After graduation she taught Latin at Somerville (Massachusetts) High School for two years. In 1894 she began a year of graduate studies at Radcliffe College. The following year she spent at the University of Berlin on a scholarship from the Women's Educational and Industrial Union. Her mother accompanied her on her European travels during the summer of 1895 and remained in Berlin during the school year. It was there that MKS met and became engaged to Vladimir Gregorievitch Simkhovitch (1874-1959), a Russian student of economics. During the summer of 1896 she and her friend Emily Greene Balch attended the International Socialist Trade Union Congress in London.

Upon her return to the United States, MKS completed one final year of graduate study at Columbia University. During this time she was active in the woman suffrage movement in New York City and in the Social Reform Club, a group that studied and promoted social welfare legislation. In 1897 she accepted a position as headworker of the College Settlement House on New York's Lower East Side; she left in 1898 to work at the Friendly Aid House, also on the East Side, where she remained until 1902.

V.G. Simkhovitch had received his Ph.D. from the Univer-sity of Halle in 1898 and had subsequently come to the United States to begin a brief fellowship at Cornell University. In 1904 he received a teaching appointment in economic history at Columbia University, where he remained until 1942. MKS and VGS were married in 1899. Their son, Stephen Kingsbury Simkhovitch, was born in 1902 and their daughter, Helena (Simkhovitch) Didisheim, in 1903. After 1908, the children lived in Whitehouse, New Jersey, at Orlanova, the family's farm. MKS and VGS spent "long weekends" there.

In 1901 MKS and John Elliot formed the Association of Neighborhood Workers, a forerunner of United Neighborhood Houses of New York. In the same year the Cooperative Social Settlement Society of New York was formed and opened as Greenwich House in 1902. GH was located on Jones Street in Greewich Village and MKS, soon called "Mrs. Sim," was its first director. In addition to establishing GH as a non-sectarian settlement house, she meant to break with what she saw as the "lady bountiful" tradition of charitable settlement work by focusing on neighborhood life and becoming part of it. Arriving with their infant son, MKS and VGS began a lifelong residency at GH that lasted through its moves first to larger quarters on Jones Street and, in 1916, to its present location at 27 Barrow Street.

Greenwich House quickly grew in scope and activity, adding a music school in 1906 and one of the first "infant welfare clinics" in 1916. (MKS's brother, Dr. Isaac William Kingsbury, served as a physician for GH.) Theater and pottery workshops were begun, and their products were soon as well known as GH itself. In 1929 GH began a long social work training affiliation with Columbia University; MKS had been an adjunct professor of social economics at Barnard College, 1907-10, and associate in the same field at Columbia Teachers College, 1910-13. She was also a lecturer at the New York School of Social Work, 1912-15.

Beginning in 1907 as chairman of the Congestion Committee in New York City, MKS became an active advocate of housing reform, including low cost and public housing, and an early supporter of slum clearance. She became a member of the Public Recreation Department of New York City in 1911 and served as chairman of the City Recreation Committee in 1925. She was soon recognized as a national authority on public housing and settlement work and in 1917 was elected president of the National Federation of Settlements. She was also president of the nationally focused Public Housing Conference from about 1931 until 1943. She remained locally active as well, helping to organize the Greenwich Village Action Committee (ca. 1944-45) and the Greenwich Village Association (1946-47).

In the 1930s and 1940s MKS served on several state boards that directed policy on housing and other social welfare issues with which she was concerned. These included the New York State Board of Welfare (1929-1943), for which she also served as chair of the Committee on Housing, and the New York State Board of Health (1929-1944). Her most extensive involvement was with the New York City Housing Authority. She was its first vice-chairman from 1934 until 1948. In 1937 she made an unsuccessful bid for election to the New York City Council. During this period she was also active in the National Urban League and was a member of New York's Enemy Alien Hearing Board.

MKS was a popular speaker on such topics as settlement work, housing, recreation, and woman's suffrage, and she published articles on housing, education, and her work at GH. She also published several books, including The City Worker's World (1917), Neighborhood: My Story of Greenwich House (1938), Group Life (1940), and Here Is God's Plenty (1942). Her last book, Green Shoots, was never published; it concerned the responses of various communities to urban problems and is included as #85-88 of these papers.

MKS retired as director of GH in 1946 but remained as director emeritus; she was succeeded by Gertrude Sturgis (Mrs. Dexter P.) Cooper. She continued to live at GH until her death on November 15, 1951.

For additional biographical information, see Notable American Women: The Modern Period (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1980).

Kingsbury Family:

Laura (Holmes) Kingsbury, her brother Charles, and their sister Ellen ("Nellie"), grew up in Bridgewater, Mass. Ellen Holmes (1844?-18??) became preceptress of a local seminary. LHK graduated from Bridgewater State Normal School in 1856 and then taught in a nearby public school. The next year she began her own school but closed it to continue her studies at BSNS. Here she met and became engaged to Isaac Franklin Kingsbury. IFK, after graduating from BSNS, reimbursed the state for his tuition and took a job in the Boston office of the Taunton Copper Company.

IFK enlisted in the 32nd Massachusetts Regiment in 1862 and for the next few years wrote LHK (and occasionally EH) in Yarmouth, Mass., where she was teaching, or at her home in Bridgewater. They were married in January 1865, while IFK was on furlough. Later that year, wounded and something of a local hero, IFK settled in Chestnut Hill with LHK and began work as a weigher with the U.S. Customs Service. In 1872 he was appointed chief clerk of the Adjutant General's Department of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and also assistant adjutant general. He resigned from the job in 1883 to become town clerk of Newton (which included Chestnut Hill) and retired in 1911. From 1870 to 1873 he had also served as a Newton selectman.

From the guide to the Papers, 1852-1960, (Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute)

Archival Resources
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Place Name Admin Code Country
Massachusetts
Germany
United States
New York (N.Y.)
Europe
Subject
Authors
Occupation
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Birth 1867

Death 1951

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