Ruth Ebright Finley, 1884-1955

Ruth Ebright Finley, “girl reporter, sob sister, feature writer” for the Akron Beacon Journal in the early 20th century, went on to a career as an editor, a biographer, an expert on American quilts – and one of the greatest clairvoyants of the 20th century.

It’s a long trip from Akron to the afterlife but was an easy one for Finley because she lived two quite separate lives.

Ruth Ebright was born in Akron, the daughter Dr. L.S. Ebright and his wife, the former Julia Ann Bissell. Her father himself lived a kind of dual existence, one as a physician and one, for a time, as the postmaster of Akron.

Ebright was well educated for her day. She enrolled in Oberlin in 1902 but returned to Akron the next year to go to old Buchtel College (now The University of Akron). She never completed her degree.

Instead she started her reporting career with the Beacon Journal. This was a time of sob sisters and sensational journalism. Ebright won a name for herself when managed to get an interview with the former Akronite wife of inventor Thomas Alva Edison. She then went on to the oldCleveland Press. She was best known for her stories on the working conditions of labor women and she is credited with helping get a bill passed that was designed to benefit working women. It was while at the Cleveland Press that she met and married Emmet Finley, an editor there.

Finley had a varied journalistic career after that. She was woman’s page editor of the Cleveland Press, fiction editor of the Scripps-Howard newspaper chain, managing editor for the old Washington Herald, woman’s editor of the Enterprise Newspaper Association, assistant editor ofMcClure’s magazine and editor of Guide Magazine and theWoman’s National Political Review.

There were many dimensions to Finley’s life. Building on her interest in quilts and quilting, she wrote the book, Old Patchwork Quilts and the Women Who Made Them. Part of the movement to reawaken American interest in quilts and quilting, Finley designed the quilt given first lady Eleanor Roosevelt. There was a certain irony in this because Finley was a critic of the New Deal, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the first lady on the pages of the Woman’s National Political Review, the periodical she edited.

Finley was also an historian of sorts. In 1931, she published a biography of antebellum magazine editor Sarah Josepha Hale. The Lady of Godey’s: Sarah Josepha Haleis still considered an important resource on Hale and her popular woman’s periodical.

Even as Finley continued her career as an editor, quilt expert and historian, she and her husband were exploring different aspects of reality.

As Joan and Darby, the Finleys became chronicling their exploits in the afterlife in their 1920 book Our Unseen Guest. That book chronicled how they first got involved in the paranormal. In Cleveland in 1916, they played with a Ouija board and met their guide to the afterlife, a volunteer ambulance driver who had died in France the year before. Although Our Unseen Guest quickly became a classic in psychic literature, the Finleys were able to keep their involvement in the paranormal secret.

Ruth Ebright Finley died in 1955. Her husband had died five years earlier. The couple did not have any children. Ruth Ebright Finley’s papers are located in The University of Akron Archives.

Photo courtesy of The University of Akron Archives.

–Kathleen L. Endres

Maud Hayes DeVaughn, 1848-1943

Maud Hayes DeVaughn was a leader in the fight for prohibition in Akron, Ohio, and played active roles in many other organizations during her 75 years.

DeVaughn’s 16 years as officer of the Summit County Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) displayed her strong beliefs in prohibition. She served as secretary for nine years, and she retired 1933 after seven years as president.

After her term with the WCTU was complete, DeVaughn moved over to leadership roles at the Akron and Summit County Federation of Women’s Clubs. She served as president of that organization in 1936.

DeVaughn was also the founder and president of the South High PTA.

DeVaughn began a radio series in 1936 that focused on Akron women and public welfare. She was a member of the Board of Maintenance of the YWCA and the Board of Goodwill Industries.

A member of First United Brethren Church, DeVaughn died in 1943.

Photo courtesy of The University of Akron Archives.

–Jennifer Petric

Inez G. Crisp, 1887-1965

Mrs. Inez G. Crisp was a writer and an artist, as well as a prominent member of many social organizations in Akron. She was also a controversial leader of the Akron and Summit County Federation of Women’s Clubs.

Crisp was involved in the Akron Woman’s City Club and on the board of its Little Galleries organization. She was the oldest member of the Aeronautical Association and was associated with the Mary Day Nursery and Children’s Hospital. For a time, she served as president of the Order of Golden Arrows, Phi Beta Phi fraternity and the Akron Panhellenic Council. She attended college at Ohio University.

In addition to these organizations, Crisp was a member of the Women’s Art League, which was a club of women artists. In order to participate in the Art League, a potential member had to submit some of her paintings to a 12-woman jury for review or have a painting accepted by the Akron Art Institute for its May show. When the Art League began in 1933, there were 20 members; but by 1939, when Crisp was treasurer, the organization had expanded to 40. Eventually, Crisp became a president of the group.

Crisp was elected president for the Akron and Summit County Federation of Women’s Club in 1923; but just one year later in May 1924, she stepped down from the position. According to stories printed in the Akron Beacon Journal, Crisp was accused of being “influenced by political backers of Mayor Rybolt’s motorization plan to oppose any federation move which would not be in support of Rybolt’s scheme.” However, she blamed her health. “My family, health and home make it necessary for me to resign. Things have been unfortunate in the organization. I hope they will be able to get together and solve their problems,” said Crisp. Anna (Mrs. C.H.) Case was appointed to complete the remainder of Crisp’s presidential term.

During her lifetime, Crisp had her artwork displayed at O’Neil’s and the Akron Art Institute. She wrote several fiction stories and historical articles that were published.

Crisp was born in Mount Sterling, Ohio, and came to Akron in 1909. She was married to Raymond G. Crisp, who was the chairman of Fred J. Crisp Co., a company that supplied builder materials. The Crisps resided at 1934 Highbridge Road.

When Crisp died at St. Thomas Hospital in 1965 at the age of 78, she was a widow. She left one son, George E. She is buried in Chestnut Hill Cemetery.

Photo courtesy of the Beacon Journal.

–Janelle Baltputnis

Lulu E. Crawford, 1875-1955

Mrs. Lulu E. Crawford was part of a generation of well-educated women who devoted their energies to bettering the city of Akron through civic organizations.

A graduate of old Buchtel College (now The University of Akron), Crawford was a gifted public speaker. The Beacon Journal described her as “skilled in elocution and public speaking.” In fact, she taught and studied elocution (the practice of public speaking) at Emerson College in Boston before her marriage. She was married to Robert K. Crawford, one of Akron’s most popular real estate developers.

Crawford, an Akron native, got involved with women’s organizations when she was still in college. She was a member of Delta Gamma sorority and retained her ties to the organization even after graduation by serving as a national vice president of Delta Gamma. She also was involved in the Akron Panhellenic Association, a federation of sororities in the city.

She was charter member of the College Club of Akron and later served as the group’s president. She was also a charter member of the Woman’s City Club and served as president and secretary of the club’s Little Theater Group.

Crawford got involved in the city’s Women’s Council, a federation of women’s organizations that would be renamed the Akron Federation of Women’s Clubs. In 1919 she helped revise the Women’s Council constitution. She was also on the nominating committee for the Akron and Summit County Federation of Women’s Clubs, a particularly powerful position in light of the many women involved in civic and community organizations in the Progressive period. She also held the position of president in the New Century Club from 1934-1935. In addition, she was a board member of Peoples Hospital. She was a member of the First Congregation Church as well.

Crawford died in Peoples Hospital in 1955, at the age of 80, after a brief illness. When she died, Crawford left four children. The Crawfords resided at 785 Merriman Road. She is buried in Rose Hill Cemetery in Akron.

–Janelle Baltputnis

Anna Trowbridge Viall Case, 1883-1965

Mrs. Anna Trowbridge Viall Case earned her place in Akron history with her service to the public schools by being on the Board of Education longer than any other woman up to that point. She also earned a place in history for her service to the community through involvement in various civic organizations. Her contributions were so great, in fact, that the Beacon Journal named her Akron’s Woman of the Year in 1938.

During her 24 years on the Board of Education–10 as president–Case brought about many innovations. She promoted the employment of African-American teachers; she helped formulate programs to help mentally handicapped students; she worked to coordinate services between the Summit County Mental Health Association and the schools so that troubled pupils could get the help they needed; and she pushed for expanded vocational and recreational facilities for Akron schools. When she retired from the Board of Education in 1957, the Akron school system was better because of her association with it.

Part of her success revolved around her personal style. Case made it her business to be familiar with everyone associated with the schools, from the custodians to the principals, from the bus drivers to the teachers. She disliked controversy. She allowed everyone to have their say and tried to work out compromises. She also had strong administrative skills, following through on her many responsibilities.

Case also served as president of the Akron and Summit County Federation of Women’s Clubs at a time when the organization faced real crises. Inez Crisp had resigned as president, citing health reasons, but political charges loomed in the background. Not only was Case able to rebuild the group but she also expanded its membership. In 1926, the end of her term, the Beacon Journal marveled at the Federation’s successes. “Mrs. Case has served as head of the local federation for the last two years and during that time the organization has enjoyed its most successful years, also increased its membership more than one-third.” Case then went on to a statewide position in the organization — vice president of the northeast district of Ohio Federation. As vice president, she oversaw 16 branch federations, which represented 162 separate clubs. Upon her election as vice president, the following comment was made about Case: “Truly a woman who undertakes to steer this largest of all women’s organizations through a two-year term of office is making a sacrifice worthy of a real citizen.”

Case also became the vice president of the Travelers’ Aid Society, third vice president of the Women’s Association of the First Congregational Church and president of the New Century Club. In addition to being a charter member of the Woman’s City Club, she was also director and chairman of committees in that organization.

She served on the executive board of the Akron Home and School League. She was also an associate member of the Akron branch of the National Story Tellers’ League and she was head of the women’s committee to organize a speaker’s bureau to help the Community Chest campaign. The Community Chest was the forerunner of United Way.

Case was also on the educational publicity committee and the chairman of the board “to aid the Better Akron Federation in the work of all its agencies.” She was a member of the College Club, the League of Women Voters and president of the Young Women’s Christian Association from 1917-1919. In 1925, she was appointed to vice president of the Ohio Public Health Association, which brought her back to her educational and personal roots.

Anne Trowbridge Viall was born in Tallmadge, Ohio, in 1883. She attended Lake Erie College, originally planning to be a teacher. During her senior year, however, she shifted her career plans to social work. In 1905 she was a district visitor for Cleveland’s Associated Charities, delivering milk tickets and eggs to TB patients in the Haymarket district, primarily Polish and Hungarian immigrants. In 1908, she was named city supervisor. Her career ended in 1911 when she married Claude Case, a veterinarian at the Akron Veterinary Hospital, and moved to Akron. The couple, who resided at 26 Orchard Road, had one son.

Photo courtesy of The University of Akron Archives.

–Janelle Baltputnis

Geraldine Virginia Braley, 1890-1964

Geraldine Virginia Braley was the first and, for decades, the only woman who was president of a bank in Akron, Ohio. She never advocated equality with men. However, she promoted women into most of the key positions in the bank she ran.

Braley was born in New Martinsville, W.Va., but her formative years were spent in Thurston, Ohio. She attended elementary and high school in Fairfield County’s centralized school system and attended business college in Columbus, Ohio.

She got a job at a Columbus ice cream firm and came to Akron to manage that company’s office in that city. She then went to work for the old Hower Department Store as the manager of its business office.

It was while she worked there that she first heard of a new bank about to open. In 1921, she joined Society Savings and Loan as its first employee. The bank quickly became successful, so successful, in fact, that the trustees questioned the wisdom of having a woman involved. Braley was let go and she soon found a job in the office at B.F. Goodrich.

Those bank trustees, however, realized that they had made a terrible mistake; they wanted her back and offered her the position of assistant treasurer. Braley returned and never left Society Savings, which became First Federal Savings and Loan of Akron, again.

Braley became an expert in the banking industry. She read all the trade publications; she attended banking conferences; she went to school at The University of Akron and took classes in savings and loans and psychology. She knew her field and she got along well with the customers. The Beacon Journal reported in 1937 that she enjoyed helping wage earners achieve home ownership.
In 1941, she was named chief officer of the bank with the title of executive secretary. In 1943, she was elected president and was elected president every year until she retired in 1960.

Braley contended there were three ingredients for success in business: a mathematical mind, an expertise in the field (based on study and reading of trade publications) and knowledge of her business from the bottom up.Anyone — male or female, who had that mathematical mind and was willing to put in the time and effort, could achieve success in banking or any other business, she argued.

In her career, however, she preferred to work with women. She trained them; she put them through every phase and part of the organization; then she promoted them to positions that women seldom held in banking at the time. In return, a colleague said she “expected loyalty, production, accuracy and speed….”

Braley was well respected nationally in the banking industry. She was named to key committees of the U.S. Savings and Loan League. She was also elected president of the Summit-Portage County Savings and Loan League.

After her retirement, Braley moved to Passaic, N.J. She died there in 1964 at the age of 73.

Photo courtesy of the Beacon Journal. 

–Kathleen L. Endres

Clara Bingham, 1871-1946

Miss Clara Bingham earned the title “The First Lady of Goodyear” for her 47 years of service to Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. In 1921, Bingham became the director of women’s activities at Goodyear and William Egan later noted in the Akron Times-Press that “Practically every outside-of-work club for women at the factory has been the result of her work.”

Bingham had a motto that “All workers need escape. No matter how much you enjoy your work–you need play too. It doesn’t pay to become stagnated.” This motto led her to create the Wingfoot Girls Club and the Goodyear Garden Club for female workers at the factory. She also organized basketball and volleyball teams, bridge clubs and a summer camp for them. According to a story in the Akron Beacon Journal, she had much faith in the power of recreation.

Some of Bingham’s views were quite advanced for her time. For instance, she believed that married women who work outside the home should not have to do housework. She also felt that children no longer knew how to have fun. Bingham never married or had any children, yet she was still seen a “mother figure for the working woman.”

She was hired at Goodyear as a stenographer on Nov. 20, 1898, the day before the plant opened. “The Seiberlings [the original owners of Goodyear] were impressed with her pleasant demeanor and intelligence,” according to the Akron Beacon Journal. When she began, the whole factory operated with just a few hundred employees. She earned $10 a week. An article from the Beacon Journal stated, “Bingham liked the job and enjoyed taking dictation from the Seiberlings.” She was popular with her fellow employees and among other Akron business women.

In 1908, Bingham became Goodyear’s assistant purchasing agent; and in 1916, she became head of the company welfare work. She worked at Goodyear longer than her original bosses; she was a member of the “Old Guard,” employees who were on the payroll in 1900. In 1928, Bingham became the company librarian and an article in theBeacon Journal said that, “By 1940, Goodyear had more than 500 stenographers, but its original stenographer was still a happy, productive employee.”

When Bingham died on May 23, 1946, the flags at Goodyear were lowered to half-staff and the clock chimes on East Market Street played hymns in her memory. TheWingfoot Clan remembered her as “the most-beloved woman employee.”

Two years after her death, a stone memorial was dedicated in her honor with a bronze tablet that said, “Bingham Park, dedicated to the memory of Clara E. Bingham, 1871-1946, ‘The First Lady of Goodyear.’ Her life and counsel were of help to many.” The Beacon Journal reported, “Bingham would be happy to know that neighborhood children are having fun there.”

Bingham, who was a native of Edinburg in Portage County, graduated from Akron Business College and worked for two years at American Belting Co. before going to work for Goodyear.

Photo courtesy of The University of Akron Archives.

–Janelle Baltputnis

Irene S. Bame, 1890-1965

Mrs. Irene S. Bame was one of the pioneering teachers for Americanization classes in Akron.

Her work with Americanization (the process of making immigrants familiar with American culture) began during World War I when she was involved with finding a solution to immigration problems in Buffalo, N.Y. She began her work in Akron in 1918 after moving here from Buffalo. The Akron Americanization program was in the very early stages when she arrived, so Bame had no textbooks from which to teach her classes. The lack of available resources prompted her to write and publish “English for Adult Immigrants” and “Lessons for Homemakers.” Bame served as supervisor of instruction of the Akron Public School’s Americanization program for many years.

Bame graduated from the University of Michigan where she was affiliated with Chi Omega. After moving to Akron, she once headed the Akron Panhellenic Association. Bame was also a member of the College Club, a charter member of the Akron Art Institute and participated in the Akron Woman’s City Club.

In addition to these activities, Bame was on the YWCA board, the International Institute board, and the Akron General Hospital board. She attended the First Congregational Church and belonged to its Women’s Fellowship. She was involved with the Family and Children’s Service Society of Akron as well.

Bame’s husband, Alfred, worked as a clerk at Goodyear and they resided at 717 Diagonal Road. They had no children. Bame enjoyed several years of retirement from Akron classrooms before her death in 1965 at the age of 75. She is buried in Attica, N.Y.

Photo courtesy of The University of Akron Archives.

–Janelle Baltputnis

Marie Reid Laub Babcox, died 1962

Mrs. Marie Reid Laub Babcox was one of the more influential leaders of the local Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA).

She was a lifetime member of the YWCA and she served as president of the Akron YWCA board of directors from 1933-1936. Babcox’s interests extended beyond just the local level though. She was a member of the hospitality committee at Chautauqua, which was a department of the national YWCA board. Her other involvement with national organizations included the World Service Council and the National Interpretation and Support Committee.

Outside of her YWCA work, Babcox was well-known for her leadership in the Woman’s City Club, the Altrusa College Club, the Akron Council of Church Women and the Flora Stone Mather Alumnae. She also served as third vice president of the Young Women’s Christian Association from 1926-1927 and she participated in the Tuesday Musical Club as a director and a singer. She attended the First Congregational Church.

Described in the Akron Beacon Journal as a “widely known clubwoman and social leader,” Babcox was born in Cleveland but moved to Akron in 1914. She married Edward S. Babcox, who was president of Babcox Publications, a company that puts out a number of specialized business magazines. They had four children: Reid, Tom B., Edward S. Jr. and Anne. The Babcoxs resided at 666 North Portage Path.

Babcox died in 1962 in Winter Park, Fla., of a heart aliment that she suffered from for many years. When she died, she left behind her husband, her children and 18 grandchildren. She was cremated in Winter Park.

–Janelle Baltputnis

Mary Orr Barber, 1876-1946

Mary Orr Barber, second wife of Ohio Columbus Barber, the match king of Akron, made her own contributions to the city and the surrounding area by her involvement in business, civic organizations and politics.

Little is known of Mary Orr’s early education. In 1903, O.C. Barber, owner of the Diamond Match Co., hired 26-year-old Mary Orr as his private secretary in charge of the Akron, Ohio, office. On Dec. 2, 1915, the two were married – much to the surprise of family and friends. He was 74 and she was 41. Daughter Anna Barber Bevan is said not to have appreciated the marriage – or her step mother’s age, 10 years younger than she was. By all accounts, however, the marriage worked out well; the new bride knew every phase of the Barber business dealings and a prenuptial contract (Orr insisted on it) assured the new bride of future financial security, $25,000 a year for life. In any case, after the wedding, Barber took her place in Akron and Barberton society.

She was a member of the Portage Country Club and the Akron Garden Club. She was especially involved in the Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA), serving as chair of the newly organized committee for young business girls and as a member of the board of directors when the association was planning and building its new headquarters on South High Street in Akron.

But it was really after her husband’s death in 1920 that Mary Orr Barber came into her own in fairly non-traditional ways. She moved to the Applebrook Farm, a large fruit farm/estate in Ghent. She needed to know the newest farming techniques so she went to Cornell University to find out how to grow and sell apples successfully. She also got involved with the Grange. By the late 1930s, Barber was diversifying her farm’s production. Although fruit remained the primary business, she also began manufacturing sausage at the farm.

In 1932, she ran unsuccessfully on an anti-prohibition platform for the state legislature.

Throughout the 1930s, she remained active in civic organizations, serving on the board of Children’s Hospital, and continued her affiliation with St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Akron.

Barber died on her Applebrook farm in December 1946. She had been ill for a year. Barber is buried at Glendale Cemetery in Akron.

Photo courtesy of the Beacon Journal.


–Kathleen L. Endres