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EXTRACTS FROM GENEVIEVE SHAW'S LETTER Note: Mrs. Mary B. Welch visited her daughter, Mrs. A. B. Shaw, in Des Moines during the period when my husband, Mr. Freeman R. Conaway, and Mr. Shaw were business partners. I was impressed with her beauty and with her gracious, charming personality; she was always stylishly gowned, yet with simple, exquisite taste. ~enevieve Shaw, granddaughter of Mary B. Welch, lives in Pasadena, with her father. Extracts from a recent letter, received from Miss Shaw, gives an intimate account of Mary B. Welch. Grandmother was nineteen, with two children, when her first husband died. Soon afterward she taught in the Detroit Female Seminary, where her brother•inlaw was president. Later she married Dr. A. S. Welch and lived in Florida, where he had a large plantation. He was sent to Washington and in a short time was appointed President at Ames. Dr. ~elch died in 1889, in Santa Barbara, with Grandmother and his brother, D. M. Welch, with him. At her husband's request, a few years later, she married the President's brother, D. M. Welch, a wealthy, retired wholesale grocer of New Haven, Connecticut. They always spent their winters in California where they maintained quite a pretentious home. I am sending you some pictures and a church magazine with an article Grandmother wrote for a missionary group. It throws a new light on her manysided character. After her last marriage she became quite ac~ive in the Methodist Church, as Mr. Welch was a member, and prominent in that denomination. Of course you know she never did anything half-way, so she entered into this with great vim, but after Grandfather's death, she returned to the Episcopal Church, as her sister was living with her and it seemed foolish for them to attend different churches and have different church activities. So she took a Sunday School Class of young men about fifteen years of age and became such an influence with them that as they grew to manhood they still stayed in her class. She entertained them frequently at her home, and they were just like her own boys or grandsons. In fact, we had a call the other day from one of the boys, who was closest to her, whose family al-.Ays said he had never married because Mrs. Welch was his lady friend, and he did not need a younger one. Besides the ~unday School Class, she became leader of the older men's group, called the St. Andrew's Brotherhood. For a number of years it met at her home once a month, with a party frequently for the wives and sweethearts. It was quite remarkable, the way those middle-aged and elderly men hung on her words when she talked of the Bible. She had such a fine collection of religious books that it gave a good start to a young cler&)'Dlan w'en she died.
Object Description
Title | Biographical data - family |
Subject |
Welch, Mary B. (Mary Beaumont), 1840-1923 Welch, Adonijah Strong, 1821-1889 Families |
Description | Contains information on the Welch and Shaw families including Anna Shaw (daugher of Mary Welch), Anna Shaw's husband A. B. Shaw, and Lily Beaumont Graham (Mary Welch's sister). |
Date | 1858-1940, undated |
Type [DCMIType] | Text |
Type [IMT] | |
Collection | Mary B. (Mary Beaumont) Welch Papers, 1858-2007, undated; http://findingaids.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/arch/rgrp/12-3-11.html |
Location | Iowa State University Library Special Collections and University Archives; http://archives.lib.iastate.edu/ |
Call Number | RS 12/03/11 |
Format | 28 x 22 cm |
Identifier | 12-03-11.Welch.001-002-001 |
Rights | This work has been identified as being free of known restrictions under U.S. copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. The organization that has made this item available believes that the item is in the Public Domain under the laws of the United States, but a determination was not made as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries. (CC Public Domain 1.0 and RightsStatements.org NoC-US 1.0). The original object is available at the Iowa State University Library Special Collections and University Archives (archives@iastate.edu). To request higher resolution reproductions of the original see http://archives.lib.iastate.edu/using-our-materials/making-copies/photographs-and-documents |
Hardware/Software | Dell OptiPlex 755; Windows 7 Enterprise; Epson GT-2500; Epson Scan ver. 3.49A |
Image Manipulation | none |
Date-Created | 2012-12-13 |
Format-Type | |
File Size | 1787002 Bytes |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Collection | Mary B. (Mary Beaumont) Welch Papers, 1858-2007, undated; http://findingaids.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/arch/rgrp/12-3-11.html |
Transcription | EXTRACTS FROM GENEVIEVE SHAW'S LETTER Note: Mrs. Mary B. Welch visited her daughter, Mrs. A. B. Shaw, in Des Moines during the period when my husband, Mr. Freeman R. Conaway, and Mr. Shaw were business partners. I was impressed with her beauty and with her gracious, charming personality; she was always stylishly gowned, yet with simple, exquisite taste. ~enevieve Shaw, granddaughter of Mary B. Welch, lives in Pasadena, with her father. Extracts from a recent letter, received from Miss Shaw, gives an intimate account of Mary B. Welch. Grandmother was nineteen, with two children, when her first husband died. Soon afterward she taught in the Detroit Female Seminary, where her brother•inlaw was president. Later she married Dr. A. S. Welch and lived in Florida, where he had a large plantation. He was sent to Washington and in a short time was appointed President at Ames. Dr. ~elch died in 1889, in Santa Barbara, with Grandmother and his brother, D. M. Welch, with him. At her husband's request, a few years later, she married the President's brother, D. M. Welch, a wealthy, retired wholesale grocer of New Haven, Connecticut. They always spent their winters in California where they maintained quite a pretentious home. I am sending you some pictures and a church magazine with an article Grandmother wrote for a missionary group. It throws a new light on her manysided character. After her last marriage she became quite ac~ive in the Methodist Church, as Mr. Welch was a member, and prominent in that denomination. Of course you know she never did anything half-way, so she entered into this with great vim, but after Grandfather's death, she returned to the Episcopal Church, as her sister was living with her and it seemed foolish for them to attend different churches and have different church activities. So she took a Sunday School Class of young men about fifteen years of age and became such an influence with them that as they grew to manhood they still stayed in her class. She entertained them frequently at her home, and they were just like her own boys or grandsons. In fact, we had a call the other day from one of the boys, who was closest to her, whose family al-.Ays said he had never married because Mrs. Welch was his lady friend, and he did not need a younger one. Besides the ~unday School Class, she became leader of the older men's group, called the St. Andrew's Brotherhood. For a number of years it met at her home once a month, with a party frequently for the wives and sweethearts. It was quite remarkable, the way those middle-aged and elderly men hung on her words when she talked of the Bible. She had such a fine collection of religious books that it gave a good start to a young cler&)'Dlan w'en she died. |