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Rest Cottage with Willard, Anna Gordon and Mary Thompson Hill Willard

The EWHP exhibit Lifting as We Climb: Evanston Women and the Creation of a Community is now installed at the Frances Willard House, 1730 Chicago Avenue, Evanston, Illinois (also known fondly as Rest Cottage). An exhibit opening will be held on Sunday, November 6th from 1-4 pm. Refreshments will be served. In addition to the exhibit, visitors can tour the home, catching a glimpse of 19th century Evanston and learning more about Willard’s amazing career as a world-renowned social reformer. Willard called Evanston “a paradise for women” and the Lifting as We Climb exhibit explains how this was so from the earliest days of the community up through today. The exhibit will be open when the Willard House is open for regular tours (the first and third Sundays of the month) through 2012. For more information, visit www.franceswillardhouse.org.

Our recently closed exhibit at the Evanston History Center included a feature our exhibit team worked hard to imagine and create. We called it the “talk-back tree,” somewhat following our “Lifting as We Climb” theme. We created a tree of plywood and paint  and put out post-its in leaf colors for vistors to write on. We asked them to tell us about an important woman in their lives or in Evanston, and what made her important.

The comments we received were amazing. The tree was regularly covered with notes (as you can see from the photos) and the notes mentioned all sorts of women — most often family members, mothers, grandmothers, aunts — but sometimes women from the visitor’s personal past. Many also mentioned women from Evanston today and from Evanston history. Many were written by children. We hoped it made the exhibit a little more fun and personal.

This web site is in some ways an online extension of that tree. We have received comments about the women we’ve highlighted here. Some of those comments reference a personal connection to the stories we are telling. We’d love to continue the conversation about the meaning women, especially Evanston women, have had in our virtual visitor’s lives. So, write your comments here…

May Wood Simons

This year marks the 100th Anniversary of International Women’s Day and this moment has a surprising Evanston connection in May Wood Simons. Simons and her husband, Algie, were Evanston residents for many years and were active in the early years of the Socialist Party in America. Simons wrote for and edited several socialist publications, including the Worker’s Call, the Chicago Daily Socialist, and the Internationalist Social Review.

In 1909, the first National Woman’s Day was held throughout the United States on February 28th. It was organized by the newly formed Woman’s National Committee of the Socialist Party to celebrate the political rights of women. May Wood Simons was a delegate to, and later head of, the committee and spoke in favor of the Socialist party supporting women’s suffrage. To celebrate this first Woman’s Day, Simons gave a lecture about women’s suffrage at the Evanston Auditorium.

For the 1910 Woman’s Day, Simons spoke at the Garrick theater in Chicago, lecturing about the relationship between the women’s movement and the industrial and economic movement of workers. That same year, Simons was the American delegate to the International Socialist Congress at Copenhagen, where Clara Zetkin was inspired to create a similar celebration in Germany and Austria, founding International Woman’s Day the next year, in 1911. In the U.S., 1911 Woman’s Day was celebrated with lectures by several prominent speakers at Carnegie Hall in New York City, including Simons and fellow Chicagoan Florence Kelley.

Although we don’t know how Simons celebrated subsequent Woman’s Days, she did resign from the Woman’s National Committee in 1914 because of what she felt was a lack of care for women’s issues by the Socialist Party. Afterwards, Simons devoted herself to the cause of Americanization of immigrants during the First World War. She continued to work for women’s issues, especially women’s suffrage, and gained a position of leadership in the League of Women Voters once suffrage was achieved.

Simons later pursued a PhD in economics from Northwestern University, which she received in 1930, and also became a part-time instructor there. She published an economics textbook in 1945 entitled Everyday Problems in Economics. Though little known for her contributions to the establishment of the Woman’s Day celebrations, she remains pertinent in Evanston and national history for her activism throughout her life. Today, women around the world celebrate International Women’s Day, (go to http://www.internationalwomensday.com/ to find out more) thanks to the inspiring work of women like May Wood Simons.

Mayme Spencer

Attorney Mayme Finley Spencer was Evanston’s first African-American female alderman. She came to Evanston in 1957 with her husband Warren, a doctor at the Community Hospital. Spencer was elected alderman in 1963 and served two terms. A graduate of Kent College of Law, Spencer practiced law for many years at a Chicago law firm while also raising four children and serving on numerous city commissions and the city council. She was also active in the local civil rights movement, especially in the movement for fair housing, and at Mt Zion Missionary Baptist Church.

Mayme Spencer died at the age of 89 in February 2011. Here is a link to her Chicago Tribune obituary — http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/obituaries/ct-met-spencer-obit-20110208,0,4661222.story.

Looking Forward

Join us on January 27, 2011 for a special event where we culminate a year of exploring Evanston’s women’s history with a look toward the future, asking “What issues do women face today that need our leadership?”

This evening will include a viewing of the 2010 YWCA Evanston/North Shore YWomen Leadership Award film by Susan Hope Engel, documenting the work of three Evanston women leaders and the Evanston Women’s History Project, and a presentation by Sunny Fischer, Executive Director of The Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and co-founder of the Chicago Foundation of Women. Fischer will speak about current issues women in our community face and how we can be inspired by women leaders of the past to take on these issues today.

The evening will begin at 6:30 p.m. with a light reception and exhibit viewing of Lifting as We Climb: Evanston Women and the Creation of a Community, EHCs current exhibit in partnership with the Evanston Women’s History Project. The film and presentation will begin at 7:30 p.m. The cost is $5 for the public, free for EHC members. Reservations are encouraged as capacity is limited. To make a reservation call (847) 475-3410 or email losborne@evanstonhistorycenter.org.

Women Who Served

Visit the Evanston History Center research room to see a new small exhibit that tells the story of Evanston women who served in WWI and WWII. The exhibit was curated by our Fall intern, Hannah Van Loon. It covers several stories of Evanston women in the wars. Here is just a highlight…

Mary Glenn (1892-1972) served in the motor corps as an emergency driver. For the first nine months she worked for the secret service shuttling goods between the Steven’s building in Chicago and the Great Lakes Navel Training station. Her truck was sometimes so loaded down that police officers would stand on the bumper to balance it as it drove over the bumpy road.

With a mechanics course under her belt, she was able to become a Red Cross truck driver. She received a Ford ambulance and drove all over the city to pick up Navy men.

Included in the exhibit is the Red Cross armband Glenn wore and a scrapbook kept by her with letters, photographs, clippings and awards from her years of service.

We are proud to announce that the exhibit Lifting as We Climb: Evanston Women and the Creation of a Community is the recipient of an award of excellence from the Illinois Association of Museums. The EWHP is being honored for its work to make the “remarkable record of women’s achievement” accessible to the public through this exhibit. If you haven’t seen the exhibit yet, come to the Evanston History Center soon. (More about visiting the history center is available at www.evanstonhistorycenter.org.) This award goes to all those who helped make the project and the exhibit possible, especially our partners and funders, but also to all those women whose stories we documented, who worked so hard to make Evanston the community it is today.

YWomen Leadership Award

The Evanston Women’s History Project is proud to announce that it is one of the recipients of the 2010 YWomen Leadership Awards from the YWCA Evanston/North Shore! The YWomen Leadership awards honor and celebrate women and organizations for their work to empower women, eliminate racism, promote justice and encourage women’s leadership. For more information about the award, the other amazing recipients, or the October 14th event where the award will be formally presented, you can visit the YWCA Evanston/North Shore web site at: http://www.ywca.org/site/pp.asp?c=erLOK1PJLsF&b=4444857

The EWHP receives this award on behalf of the many Funding and Project Partners, and volunteers, who have made the project possible. For a complete list of Funders and Partners, click on this link: http://evanstonwomen.org/home/project-partners/.

It also receives the award on behalf of all the women and organizations whose stories we have documented, who struggled against great odds, worked tirelessly for the betterment of women’s lives both near and far, and left us a community where the leadership of women is valued, encouraged and recorded.

Kay Davis

Kay Davis, ca. 1944 (Couresy of Shorefront)

Katherine McDonald Wimp (better known by her stage name, Kay Davis) (1920 – ) was a classically trained vocalist, receiving her Masters Degree from Northwestern University in 1943.  She joined Duke Ellington’s band in 1944 as one of his trio of female singers and toured with the band throughout the U.S. and Europe in the 1940s before retiring from music in 1950.  She is known for her wordless vocal technique and for singing the debut of Billy Strayhorn’s “Lush Life” at Carnegie Hall in 1948.

To learn more about her, see the Wikipedia entry that includes an extensive list of her vocal work for Ellington:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kay_Davis

You can also hear brief clips of Davis singing with the Ellington band at: http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:fvfwxq85ldhe~T3

August 26, 2010 marks the 90th anniversary of women achieving the right to vote in national elections!  Evanston women played a key role in making this happen in the years preceeding the passage of the 19th amendment to the constitution in 1920.

Elizabeth Harbert was connected to the national suffrage movement through her friendship with Susan B. Anthony and wrote numerous articles and published a newsletter in support of voting rights. Frances Willard and the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union are credited by historians with convincing large numbers of women to support suffrage in the 19th century. Catharine McCulloch was instrumental in getting Illinois women the right to vote in 1913, making it the first state east of the Mississippi to do so. Some historians believe that this forced East coast states, and the nation in general, to realize the power of women voters.

If you’d like to know more about this moment in women’s history, here are a few web sites to visit:

Library of Congress, Women’s Suffrage Resources

http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/vfwhtml/vfwhome.html

Susan B. Anthony Center for Women’s Leadership

http://www.rochester.edu/sba/suffragehistory.html

National Collaborative for Women’s History Sites (working on connecting all the sites throughout the U.S. that were influential in the suffrage movement, including those in Evanston)

http://www.ncwhs.org/

About.com site on Women’s History

http://specials.about.com/service/newsletters/womenshistory/1282748400.htm

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