Mary Chawner Woody

Mary Chawner Woody
B&W portrait photograph of a woman with her hair in an up-do wearing a high-collared dark top with white fringe at the neckline.
TitlePresident, North Carolina, Woman's Christian Temperance Union
Personal
Born
Mary Williams Chawner

December 22, 1846
DiedDecember 25, 1928(1928-12-25) (aged 82)
Resting placeNew Garden Friends Cemetery, Guilford College
ReligionQuakers
Spouse
John Warren Woody
(m. 1868)
Children3
Alma mater
Profession
Signature
Senior posting
Ordination1884
Profession

For the American nurse, hospital administrator, and university professor, see Mary Woody.

Mary Chawner Woody (December 22, 1846 – December 25, 1928) was an American Quaker minister, educator, and temperance leader.[1] For ten years, she served as president of the North Carolina branch of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (W.C.T.U.), 1884–1894.[2] She was also a Friends minister.

Early life and education

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Mary Williams Chawner was born in Azalia, Indiana, December 22, 1846. She was of English ancestry. Her parents were Chalkley Albertson Chawner and Sarah (Cox) Chawner.[3] Her grandfather, John S. Chawner, was an English lawyer, who came to the U.S. early in the 19th century, and married and settled in eastern North Carolina. The other ancestors, for several generations, lived in that section. Among them were the Albertsons, Parkers and Coxes. Both families were Friends for generations. Woody's parents were very religious, and gave to their children the moral and religious training characteristic of the Friends in the era of her childhood.[1] Woody was named after her father's favorite aunt, the wife of the Rev. John Williams, the missionary to the South Pacific. This aunt in her home took a deep interest in her namesake.[4]

Woody was educated at Sand Creek and Sugar Plain Friends Monthly Meeting Schools (Indiana),[3] supplemented by training in the Friends' Bloomingdale Academy (Bloomingdale, Indiana), at Albion College (Albion, Michigan),[4] and in Earlham College (Richmond, Indiana), to which was added a year of studies in law and public speaking in University of Michigan (Ann Arbor, Michigan).[3] In all those institutions, coeducation was the rule, and the principles of equality witnessed there gave shape to the pupils' sentiments.[1]

Career

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She entered, as teacher, the Friends' Bloomingdale Academy where her brother, John Chawner, A.M., was principal.[1]

In the spring of 1868, in Thorntown, Indiana,[3] she married John Warren Woody, A.M., LL.B., of Alamance County, North Carolina. Together, they entered Whittier College (Salem, Iowa), as teachers. At the end of five years, Prof. Woody was elected the first president of Penn College,[4] an institution of the Friends, in Oskaloosa, Iowa, and Mrs. Woody entered that institution as teacher. In 1881, they returned to North Carolina to labor in Guilford College. While Mr. Woody filled the position of professor of history and political science, Mrs. Woody's poor health and the care of her family, including three children (Herman, John Waldo, and Alice),[4][2] prevented her from teaching. However, she found time for religious work in the Friends Church.[1]

When the W.C.T.U. was organized in North Carolina, she entered its ranks.[1] During the first year, she found time to organize several local Unions, and she accepted the Department of Scientific Instruction.[4] At the second State convention, held in Asheville, North Carolina in October 1884, she was chosen president, a position to which she was elected to for several years thereafter. The requirements of this office were not easily met. The unsettled conditions of society, the novelty of cooperative women's enterprises, the questionings that existed everywhere about the best ways of doing temperance wor, combined to make it unusually difficult in this State, as well as all through the South.[4] Her annual addresses before her State conventions were models.[1] By reason of her State presidency, she simultaneously served as a vice-president of the National W.C.T.U.[5]

At the time of her election to the W.C.T.U. presidency (1884), the church at home was completing its proceedings in setting her apart for the ministry.[1] She became a minister of the Friends church in North Carolina. She served in this position in North Carolina, as well as in California, Indiana, Iowa, and Kansas. Woody was also active in evangelistic work.[2]

Later teaching positions were held at Whittier College (Whittier, California) and Friends University (Wichita, Kansas).[3]

Death

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Mary C. Woody died December 25, 1928, High Point, North Carolina.[2] Interment was at New Garden Friends Cemetery, Guilford College.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). "WOODY, Mrs. Mary Williams Chawner". A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life. Charles Wells Moulton. pp. 799–800. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ a b c d "Obituary for MARY C WOODY". The News and Observer. 28 December 1928. p. 7. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Powell, William S, ed. (9 November 2000). "Woody, Mary Chawner, by Mary Edith Woody Hinshaw". Dictionary of North Carolina Biography: Vol. 6, T-Z. Univ of North Carolina Press. pp. 266–67. ISBN 978-0-8078-6699-3. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Colman, Julia (August 1888). "Mrs. Mary Chawner Woody, President of the North Carolina State Woman's Christian Temperance Union". Demorests' Monthly Magazine. Vol. 24, no. 10. W. J. Demorest. pp. 666–67. Retrieved 28 August 2023. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  5. ^ Woman's Christian Temperance Union (1884). "Presidents and corresponding secretaries of states.". Minutes of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union at The... Annual Meeting in ... with Addresses, Reports, and Constitutions. p. 143. Retrieved 28 August 2023. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
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