You know
her as the founder of
The Junior
League. And it’s a remarkable story.
At 19, a young New York debutante,
daughter of one of the richest men in
America, mobilizes a group of 80 other
young women, hence the name “Junior”
League, to work to improve child health,
nutrition and literacy among poor
immigrants living on the Lower East Side
of Manhattan.
According
to
Wikipedia, “As word of the work of the
young Junior League women in New York
spread, women throughout the country and
beyond formed Junior Leagues in their
communities. In time, Leagues would
expand their efforts beyond settlement
house work to respond to the social,
health and educational issues of their
respective communities. In 1921,
approximately 30 Leagues banded together
to form the Association of Junior Leagues
of America to provide support to one
another. With the creation of the
Association, it was Mary that insisted
that although it was important for all
Leagues to learn from one another and
share best practices, each League was
ultimately beholden to their respective
community and should thus function to
serve that community’s needs.”
You also
know how the story ends: The Junior League
goes on to become one of the most
successful women’s volunteer organizations
in the world, with 292 individual Leagues
and 160,000 members in four continents.
That’s all true…but there’s more to her
story than that.
At 27,
after her father’s death, she takes over
management of her family’s
estate, now a National Historic
Landmark, becoming in the process an
accomplished farmer and a life-long
advocate of farming co-operatives.
At 29,
she marries for love but becomes a young
widow at 41 when her husband – the athlete
and sculptor Charles Cary Rumsey – is
killed in a car accident, leaving her with
three young children.
At 47,
defying her family’s political tradition,
she publicly joins the Democratic Party, a
move significant enough at the time that
The New York Times memorializes it as an
important political news story of the day.
At 53,
President
Franklin D. Roosevelt appoints her to
chair the first government consumer rights
group, the Consumer Advisory Board (CAB)
of the
National Recovery Administration
(NRA), and she goes on to promote the
formation of consumer groups across the
country. In that role, she is one of the
highest-ranking women in the
administration.
And less
than a year later, she dies of injuries
suffered in a horseback-riding accident.
A superb horsewoman throughout her life,
Mary Harriman died young from injuries
that today would not likely have proven
fatal.
At her
memorial service, a year later at the New
York Junior League headquarters in
Manhattan, political, civic and
philanthropic leaders came to pay
tribute. Eleanor Roosevelt, a friend of
decades and a colleague in the earliest
days of The League, said, “She helped all
those she came in contact with who needed
her assistance.”
Which is
not a bad way to be remembered.
So Happy
Birthday, Mary – your work lives on.