"Going Home" Margaret Morley, Photographer

Selections from the Ramsey Library Special Collections
Prepared for exhibit March 2001 and expanded for Web display 2003
SUBMIT A BIOGRAPHY  
Description:

Some women came to western North Carolina as visitors and recorded their visit in personal dairies, in novels, and in journal articles. Some of the women stayed, and some went back to their homes in Charleston, Philadelphia, New York, Boston, Chicago, and other cities. The records of the early travelers fill us with admiration for their high independence and spirit of adventure. Theirs is a world of contrasts described in the language of the sublime and picturesque.  What these early traveling women seemed to have that is so missing in today’s world, is time. Today, women find time precious. They still travel to the mountains and they still record their experiences in word, art, sound and deed, but they do so as part of busy twentieth-century schedules.  And, Woman Time is different than Man Time, and so is Woman Space. The space these early travelers record is often precious, and closely observed, nature at its most intimate and human nature at its most vulnerable and needy. The story of women and travel is most remarkable. The experiences of these early travelers, the visitors, are recorded in woman time and space. They teach us about what we value today and what we miss and they remind us of the adventurer in us all as we journey to the future.  

Some women came to western North Carolina and lived for brief, but important years.  When they went away they took with them the essence of the place in which they lived and the friends they made and the experiences they had in “The Land of the Sky”. Their brief or long residence gave and continues to give to the region, diverse cultural, social, and educational elements. Some women lived in the city, others in the country. In Asheville, the urban dweller rubs shoulders with the rural dweller and the cross-cultural influences can be seen in many of the stories and documents of women who live and lived in the western region of the state. The values of these temporary dwellers speak to all women who have put down roots in some far-away place and have come to call it home. Theirs is a unique perspective, one that has had time to savor the local color, the values, the relationships, the culture and to distill it in exploring ways. When they have shared their thoughts, they have enriched us with their ability to look at us all in western North Carolina with a fresh eye and a discerning pen. They have found ways to lend service to the community in ways the community never realized and they pushed against stasis and against conformity in ways that the traveler and the native born could not be expected to do. 

Some women were born in western North Carolina. Their stories come from deep within the culture and mingle all the influences of past years and family roots. Their stories are often filled with personal pride, with civic pride, independence of spirit and an over-arching love of family. They believe themselves to be honest and true, the mountain "oracle". There is a homogenous pride that runs through their stories and an over-arching sense of place. The native born have a singular drive to be known as native born and to continue the pride of community found ingrained in their parents, and grandparents. Theirs are stories of successful careers, of homemakers, of debutants, of public servants, of charitable organizations, of politicians and pundits. They have served their community as legislators, as candidates for Congress, as leaders in education, and models of motherhood. Some have not served their community but have followed darker paths and for those digressions, have found a place in history. These women are foundation and they are strength in the regional history. They are the region’s continuity.  

All these women, the traveler, the dweller, and the native born, have contributed to this region we call western North Carolina and to the diverse culture that today makes this area one of the most desirable locations in which to live in the United States. Though the region has, overall, always grown at a slower pace than that of the Piedmont, the strong appeal of the region to women at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century continues its pull on women of all ages, today. The demographics of the region show a population of women somewhat higher than that of men and older than the Piedmont and the Coastal area women. It is not surprising to find women graduates of the local colleges staying on and a growing migration of women from the piedmont to the mountains. Women appear to like it here.

All the women in this exhibit had some connection to western North Carolina. But, they need not be confined by place. All contribute to our understanding of the nature of women, their accomplishments, their dreams, their talents, their mystery, their mischief, their meanness, their dedication and determination to be their own person. Throughout the biographies and stories of these women, we can see ourselves staring back. These women remind us that our dreams, our not told stories, our secret desires, will not be confined by dulled imagination, by an unwillingness to allow, by limited horizons, by glass ceilings, or a myriad of other real and construed obstacles to selfhood. These women compel us to celebrate ourselves, to celebrate all women in western North Carolina, and to celebrate the multitudes of women of the world.
 

BY GENRE ALPHABETICAL LIST

ACTRESSES

AFRICAN AMERICANS (AA)

ARTISTS     

ATHLETES

AUTHORS/WRITERS

BUSINESS LEADERS

CHEROKEE (C)

EDUCATORS

GREEKS

HOMEMAKERS

INFAMOUS

INSTITUTIONS

JEWS

LATINOS

MUSICIANS

ORGANIZATIONS

PHOTOGRAPHERS

PIONEERS

POLITICIANS

RUSSIANS

SCIENTISTS

SEELEY'S WOMEN

 

 

LINKS 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

American Association of University Women, Western NC

Asheville Normal & Collegiate Institute

Asheville Garden Club

Asheville School for Girls

Etta Baker

Beirne, Barbara

Thelma Harrington Bell (author)

Jane Raoul Bingham

Elizabeth Blackwell, M.D.

Pam Blankenship (C)

Annie Mae Bolden (AA)

Emily S. Boyce 

Jackie Bradley (C)

Doris Brewer (AA)

Rosa Gordon Brewer (AA)

Page Bryant

Kathryn Stripling Byer (author)

Ethel Burgan (AA)

Jean L. Bushyhead (C)

Frances Hodgson Burnett

Thelma Caldwell

Olive Dame Campbell

Ruth Carroll (author)

Cherokee Women's Auxiliary Choir (C)

Ruth Chicurel

Mary Ulmer Chiltosky (C)

Elspeth McClure Clark

Exum Clement

Vera Cleaver

Susanna Cocroft

Hazel Collington 

Charles Egbert Craddock (see Mary N. Murfree)

Amanda Crowe (C)

Birdie Crowe (C)

Emmeline Cucumber  (C)

Rebecca Harding Davis

Irene Dayton (author)

Grace DiSanto

Hilda Downer

Betty DuPree (C)

Joyce Conseen Dugan (C)

"Miss" Annie Dukes

Wilma Dykeman

Eloise Buckner Ebbs

Federated Women's Club, Asheville

Mary Lloyd Frank 

Margaret Fuller

Emma Garrett (C)

Dorothy Gaston

Jane Hicks Gentry

Doris Giezentanner

Gail Godwin

Christina Goings (C)

Louise Goings (C)

Frances Goodrich

Harriet Haith

Gail E. Haley (author)

Eleanor Hall

Sarah Harnden

Lucy Mae Harrison 

Lou Harshaw

Laura Joy Hawley

Trude Heller

Lucy Herring

Hilde Hoffman

Jenean Hornbuckle (C)

Dorothy Snell Howald

Gloria Huston

Dorothy Jackson

Elizabeth Jackson

Gwynn Jones

Holly Jones

Mary Jones

Minnie Jones

Dorothy Joynes

Maria Junaluska (C)

Lea Karpen

Patsy Keever

Marie Halbert King  

Louise "Percie" Lea

Lucille Lossiah (C)

Ramona Lossie (C)

Caroline McEwen

Gertrude Dills McKee

Magnolia T. McKissick

Shirley McLaughlin

Erline McQueen

Jean McKissick McNeill

Ann Harlee McNair MacRae

Betty Maney (C)

Katrina Maney (C)

Louise Bigmeet Maney (C)

Melissa Ann Maney (C)

Mary Gudger Moore

Kathleen Morehouse

Lucy Morgan

Margaret Warner Morley

Mary Noilles Murfree

Dorothy Ogburn

Shirley Jackson Oswalt (C)

Mary Parker

Annie Miller Pless

Lettie Polite 

Mother Potts

Polly Rattler (C)

Bertha Reed

Helen Tasarov Reed

Patsy Reed

Christian Reid

Lucy Riley (C)

Rita Riser

Ora Rives

Mary Rodge, UNCA author Where the Creosote Blooms

Miriam Figatner Rudow

Florence Ryan

Kate Scadin

Virginia Bryan Schreiber

Frances Stewart Silver

Nina Simone (Eunice Waymon)

Oralene Simmons

Mary Elizabeth Sligh

Mary Martin Sloop

Nancy Simpson (author)

Betty Smith

Emily Smith (C)

Carrie McDonnell Stewart

Amanda Swimmer (C)

Emma Taylor (C)

Shirley Taylor (C)

Ethel Terrell

Eleanor P. Vance

Edith Sturtevant Vanderbilt

Jeanette Goldberg Vanderwart

Amy Walker (C)

Amelia Watson

Julia Westall Wolfe

Constance Fennimore Woolson

Women's Edition of the Asheville Citizen  - November 1895

Mildred Alexander Baird White

Sprinza Weizenblatt

Louise Jackson Wright

Mary Love Stringfield Wulbern

Y.W.C.A

Charlotte Yale

Charlotte Young

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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