Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 5.djvu/649

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

NATIONAL AMERICAN CONVENTION OF 1Q2O 613 and to render most valuable assistance to her country during the Vnrld War as chairman of the Woman's Committee of the Council of National Defense, and she died in its service.] There was considerable discussion in the convention of a suit- able memorial to Dr. Shaw and finally a resolution was adopted that the association establish an official joint memorial at Bryn Mawr College a Foundation in Politics and at the Woman's Medi- cal ( 'ollege of Pennsylvania a Foundation in Preventive Medicine as a fitting continuation of her life work; l that a committee he appointed to carry out the project by appealing to the women throughout the country and that this committee be incorporated and assume the financial responsibility. 2 The Chair presented as the first donation towards the fund a check of $1,000 sent by Mrs. ( ieorge Howard Lewis of Buffalo, in memory of Dr. Shaw on her birthday. The gift -was accompanied by an eloquent tribute from Mrs. Lewis, an intimate and devoted friend of nearly twenty >, in which she gave beautiful quotations from Dr. Shaw's letters and an extract from her charming autobiography, The Story of a Pioneer. 3 As had long been the custom the officers of the association gave an informal reception to the delegates and friends on Sunday evening. This took place in the Congress Hotel and they were assisted by the local committee of arrangements. The final report of the Oversea Hospitals maintained by the 1 Dr. Shaw was a graduate of Albion College, Mich.; of the medical department of ton University and of its School of Thcolopy. The honorary degree of LL.D. was iferred on her by Temple University, Philadelphia.

Mrs. John O. Miller, president of the Pennsylvania State Suffrage Association, was

linted chairman of this committee, to which six others were added and it was to raise $500,000 to be divided between the two colleges. When Bryn Mawr IK making its "drive" for $2,000,000 in 1920 it included an appeal for $100.000 for lis chair in politics, which were subscribed. The Medical College raised $30.000 for chair in preventive medicine. The committee hopes to have the full amount by ? eb. 14, 1922. Several months before, at the invitation of Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve, a meeting been held at Barnard College, Columbia University, to arrange for the Anna Shaw Chair of American Citizenship. It was addressed by President Nicholas lurray Butler, who strongly favored it; by Dean Gildersleeve, Mrs. James Lees Laidlaw other alumnae and a committee formed to raise $100,000, of which amount $4,000 re subscribed at that tine. Mrs. George McAncny (a daughter of Dr. Mary Putnam i) was made chairman and the .hers were Barnard alumnae and well- workers for woman suffrage. The convention was asked to endorse the project, was done. Thr expects soon to have the full amount. These lectures m Citizenship will not be confined to Barnard students but will be offered women in general. ' For accounts and tributes see Appendix for this chapter.