YWCA of the U.S.A. Records 1860-2002 1906-2000
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There are 31 Entities related to this resource.
United States
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Idaho became a state on July 3, 1890 with post offices being established as early as 1876. From the guide to the Franklin County, Idaho Post Office Location Records, 1876-1945, (Utah State University. Special Collections and Archives) These photographs document Region 4, started in 1910, of the US Forest Service, covering Utah, Nevada, Southern Idaho, and Western Wyoming. From the guide to the US Forest Service Photograph Collection., 19...
Coit, Eleanor Gwinnell, 1894-1976
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Eleanor Gwinnell Coit, labor education expert, was the daughter of Emma Gwinnell and Henry Coit, M.D., and was born in Newark, N.J., on May 6, 1894. She received an A.B. (1916) from Smith College and an A.M. (1919) from Columbia University. Coit was Industrial Secretary of the New Jersey branches of the Young Women's Christian Association at Newark (1916-1917), and Orange (1917-1919), General Secretary at Bayonne (1919-1921), and Industrial Secretary of the YWCA at...
Hirth, Emma Pauline
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McCulloch, Rhoda E. (Rhoda Elizabeth), 1884-
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Rhoda McCulloch, undated Rhoda Elizabeth McCulloch was born October 17, 1884 in Fremont, Ohio, to Rollin Smiley and Fannie Sargent (Wise) McCulloch. McCulloch graduated from Fremont High School in 1902. While attending Oberlin College (1906-10), McCulloch first joined the YWCA, eventually becoming President of the campus Association. A Latin and Greek major, she earned her BA in 1910. McCulloch studied at the YWCA National Training School in New York City fo...
Rice, Anna Virena, 1880-
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Knights, Garnet J., 1900-1985
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Garnet J. Knights seated at desk, undated Garnet J. Knights was born November 21, 1900, and received a BA from Oberlin College and an MA from New York University. She joined the staff of the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA) and was a physical education instructor in Uruguay from 1927 to 1931, followed by service as Director of Health, Physical Education and Recreation at the Syracuse, NY, YWCA. In 1942 she went to Mexico as Director of Physical Education and w...
World Young Women's Christian Association
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Cotton, Bessie Boies, 1880-1959
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YWCA overseas official. Boies began work with the National YWCA in 1910. In 1917, Russian women invited the YWCA to help working women organize themselves for their new role in society. Boies helped set up the first association in Petrograd, then Moscow and other cities. Political upheavals of 1918 led to the evacuation of Americans from Bolshevik-controlled Russia and Boies made her way to northern Russia where she set up box-car canteens for U.S. troops. While in Russia she met Thomas Cotton a...
World Student Christian Federation
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The North America Regional Office of the World Student Christian Federation was formed in 1973 to serve as the governing body for WSCF-affiliated and associated student Christian movements in the United States and Canada. Within the North America Region, the North America Regional Committee and the North America Regional Executive Committee conducted business and made official decisions regarding policy, program and budget. The Student Christian Movement of Canada was the WSCF-affiliated movemen...
Cratty, Mabel, 1868-1928
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Administrator; Teacher; YWCA executive From the description of Mabel Cratty papers 1904-1928 (bulk 1913-28) . (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 460739898 Mabel Cratty was born June 30, 1868 in Bellaire, Ohio, to Mary (Thoburn) and Charles Campbell Cratty. Her father was a merchant and later an insurance agent. She attended Bellaire public schools, then spent one year at Lake Erie Seminary (1884-85), eventually finishing an undergraduate degree at Ohio W...
Norris, Elizabeth, 1914-2003
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Lackey, Ina Ruth Hillis, 1909-
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YWCA overseas secretary; YWCA official; USO regional director. Ina Ruth Hillis Lackey was born in Ardmore, Oklahoma 18 March 1909. Earned A.B. from Asbury College (Wilmore, KY) 1932; M.A. from Scarritt College (Nashville, TN), 1936; D. Ed., Columbia Teachers College, 1942-43. Lackey first went to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1936 as Director, Social Work for People's Central Institute (Methodist Board of Missions). Became Regional Superintendent and Director of local clubs,...
Lucke, Elmina Rose
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1889 Born on December 6 in Carleton, Michigan 1896 Attended one-room school in Carleton. 1908 Graduated from high school in Toledo, Ohio. 1912 1913 Helped establish and...
Moore, Elisabeth Luce, 1903-2002
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Elisabeth Luce was born in China to Presbyterian Board missionaries, April 4, 1903. She graduated from Wellesley College in 1924, where she later served on the Board of Trustees. She married Maurice T. Moore in 1926; they had two sons, Thompson and Michael. She is the sister of Henry R. Luce, founder of Time Magazine, and early in her career she worked as editor and writer for his periodicals. She was also active in volunteer social work, working with such agencies as th...
Simms, Florence, 1873-1923
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Roelofs, Henrietta, 1878-1942
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Simons, Savilla (Millis)
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Hill, Ruth Lois, 1906-
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1906 Born August 22, Norfolk, Massachusetts 1925 29 Boston University, Bachelor of Arts in Social Science, active in student YWCA 1929 YWCA summer training school for rural secretaries ...
Wright, Sara-Alyce
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World Young Women's Christian Association
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American Labor Education Service
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Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions
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The Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions was an organization which sought to recruit college and university students in the United States for missionary service abroad. It also sought to publicize and encourage the missionary enterprise in general. From the description of Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions records, 1886-1964 (inclusive). (Yale University). WorldCat record id: 702179251 The Student Volunteer Movement for Foreign Missions was an organiz...
Mathai-Davis, Prema
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American College for Girls (Istanbul, Turkey)
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The American College for Girls was an outgrowth of an educational experiment called The Home School founded in 1871 in Istanbul by the Woman's Board of Missions and a group of women educators from Boston. Under the leadership of May Mills Patrick, and with the support of Sarah L. Bowker, Caroline Borden and other Boston women, the school was granted an act of incorporation as an educational institution in 1890 by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The Home School had been gradually ...
Young Men's Christian Association (Montpelier, Vt.)
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After several preliminary attempts, the Young Men's Christian Association (Y.M.C.A.) was established in Spokane Falls, Washington Territory on November 4, 1884. William Markham was its first secretary. The Association, combining interests in social, physical and spiritual welfare among men, grew rapidly in the rapidly expanding trade center of eastern Washington. Soon after 1900, attempts were made to raise funds for a permanent home with full facilities. A large new bui...
Graham, Jewel
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United Service Organizations (U.S.)
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The United Service Organizations (USO) was incorporated in the state of New York on February 4, 1941, as a joint operation by the YMCA, YWCA, National Catholic Community Service, the National Jewish Welfare Board, the Traveler's Aid Association, and the Salvation Army, to provide religious, spiritual, social, welfare, educational, and entertainment services to men and women in the armed forces during World War II. The USO has continued to provide these services to the present. From t...
Lerrigo, Edith
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Dodge, Grace H. (Grace Hoadley), 1856-1914
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Social welfare worker; Philanthropist; Educator From the description of Grace Hoadley Dodge papers, 1882-1995 (bulk 1882-1915) (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 460740016 Grace Hoadley Dodge was born on May 21, 1856 in New York City into a wealthy family with a strong tradition of philanthropic and evangelical activity. She was the oldest of six children born to Sarah Hoadley and William Earl Dodge, Jr. Dodge received most of her education at home from privat...
Young Women's Christian Association of the U.S.A.
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Records of the YWCA's programs and activities among blacks began in 1907. From the description of Records, 1920. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 232007201 The YWCA of the Mid-Peninsula opened in 1948 as a recreation center for business women. It expanded to provide recreational and social services for women that met the organization's mission of "empowering women and eliminating racism." The organization was based in Palo Alto until its closing in 2003. ...
Elliott, Grace Loucks, 1891-
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YWCA executive; Author; Lecturer From the description of Grace Loucks Elliott papers, 1918-1966 (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 476761633 Grace Loucks was born February 19, 1891, in Alverton, Pennsylvania, to John Lepman and Sarah Jane (Hunsberger) Loucks. While attending Findlay College in Findlay, Ohio, Loucks first joined the YWCA. After earning her B.A. in 1910, she taught high school at Findlay College Academy (1911-12), East Huntington High School in ...