Lives That Changed Lives
Anna Howard Shaw
(1847- 1919)
Anna Howard Shaw was
one of the first women given
a license to preach in the
Methodist Episcopal church.
Her lifetime accomplishments
include not only her work in
religion, but in the fields
of women's rights, medicine,
and public speaking, which
resulted in her fame
worldwide.
Anna Howard Shaw was
born in England on February
14, 1847. When she was four
years old the Shaw family
moved from England to
America, where they lived in
Massachusetts. In 1859 they
settled in the wilderness of
Green Township, Mecosta
County, near Big Rapids,
Michigan. They lived on an
isolated, rundown farm that
required much work before it
would become productive.
After living there only a
short time, her father left
her mother and the children
alone on the farm and
returned to Massachusetts to
work. He left them in a
really sorry state. The
farmhouse was a cabin with
only holes for doors and
windows and the fields were
full of tree stumps. Her
father's absence caused the
mother to have a nervous
breakdown and her oldest
brother was in poor health,
forcing 12-year-old Anna to
care for the farm by
clearing the land, planting
crops, and finishing off the
cabin along with caring for
the family.
Anna only received
two years of formal
schooling as a youth, which
she supplemented with her
own reading. When she was
fourteen years old she felt
the call to preach and at
the age of fifteen she began
to teach school in a
frontier schoolhouse.
Eventually she went on to
attend high school in Big
Rapids, Michigan and then on
to study at Albion College.
Having an adventurous spirit
and thirst for knowledge,
Anna later studied at Boston
University where she earned
a theology degree in 1878.
She has the distinction of
being the second woman to
graduate from Boston
University School of
Theology, but the New
England Conference of the
Methodist Episcopal Church
refused her ordination. She
did, however, receive
ordination by the New York
Conference of the Methodist
Protestant Church in 1880,
becoming the first woman to
be ordained in any branch of
Methodism (Adelman, Famous
Women, p.258).
While serving in
East Dennis, Massachusetts
in the Wesleyan Methodist
Church, Anna continued her
education and earned a
medical degree from Boston
University. When she was
thirty-nine years old she
branched out from the field
of pastoral and healing
ministries to speak out for
social justice concerns,
organizing and lecturing
throughout the world for the
causes such as temperance,
peace, and women's rights.
During her lifetime she gave
more than 10,000 lectures
worldwide.
In 1892, when Susan
B. Anthony became president
of the newly formed National
American Woman Suffrage
Association (NAWSA), Anna
became vice president. In
1904, Anna became the
president of the NAWSA.
Throughout this time frame
she was a well-known figure
in demonstrations,
conferences, congressional
hearings, and lecture
circuits. She spoke in every
state of the United States
and she also performed
home-front war work during
World War I, receiving a
Distinguished Service Medal
by the U.S. Congress.
In the midst of a
successful speaking career,
Anna Howard Shaw fell ill
and died in her home in
Moylan, Pennsylvania on July
2, 1919. She will forever be
remembered for her enduring
legacy resulting from her
leadership in the women's
suffrage movement.
This article may be
re-published as long
as the following
resource box is
included:
Patricia Chadwick is a
freelance writer and
has been a
stay-at-home mom for
15 years. She is
currently a columnist
in several online
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as editor of two
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