Hallie Paxson Winsborough
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Hallie Paxson Winsborough (March 7, 1865 – June 20, 1940) was an American church worker. As the first Secretary of Women's Work for the
Presbyterian Church in the United States The Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS, originally Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America) was a Protestant denomination in the Southern and border states of the United States that existed from 1861 to 1983. That y ...
(PCUS), she worked for civil rights and interracial cooperation, especially in the American South. She was also a founding member of the
Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching The Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching (ASWPL) was a women's organization founded by Jessie Daniel Ames in Atlanta, Georgia in November 1930, to lobby and campaign against the lynching of African Americans.Nancy Baker Jone ...
(AWSPL).


Early life

Hallie Paxson was born in Mason City, Illinois, and raised in St. Louis, the daughter of William P. Paxson and Harriet Missouri Swing Paxson. Her father was an ordained Presbyterian minister from a family active in church work. She attended Synodical College, a church-run women's college in Fulton, Missouri.


Career

Winsborough, "an organizational whirlwind", taught school as a young woman. In 1908, she investigated living conditions among the Italian immigrants in Kansas City, and wrote a report that led to the founding of the Italian Mission and the Slavic Mission, Presbyterian outreach programs. From 1912 to 1929, Winsborough was the first Secretary (or Superintendent) of Women's Work for the PCUS, the Southern body of Presbyterians after the American denomination's split over slavery in 1861. She started a series of "Colored Women's Conferences" to bring more Black women into active roles in the church. In 1922, she visited a mission school for girls in Japan, and started a denomination-wide "birthday offering" fundraiser to support mission projects. In 1923, she gave a nationally publicized speech to the Executive Council of the Federal Council of Churches meeting in Ohio, in which she denounced the
Ku Klux Klan The Ku Klux Klan (), commonly shortened to the KKK or the Klan, is an American white supremacist, right-wing terrorist, and hate group whose primary targets are African Americans, Jews, Latinos, Asian Americans, Native Americans, and ...
and exhorted American Christians to work against racism and for interracial cooperation. In 1927 she was the first woman allowed to address the denomination's General Assembly. She resigned from the national secretary position in 1929, for health reasons, but remained involved in the programs she helped to launch for ten further years. Beyond church settings, Winsborough was active in the
Commission on Interracial Cooperation The Commission on Interracial Cooperation (1918–1944) was an organization founded in Atlanta, Georgia, December 18, 1918, and officially incorporated in 1929. Will W. Alexander, pastor of a local white Methodist church, was head of the organizatio ...
(CIC), and was a founding member of the Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching (ASWPL). In 1925, she was an American delegate to the ecumenical
World Conference of Life and Work The World Conference of Life and Work ( sv, Stora ekumeniska mötet) was held on the initiative of Church of Sweden archbishop Nathan Söderblom in Stockholm, Sweden 1925 to discuss social cooperation. Attending the meeting were most major Christia ...
, in Stockholm.


Publications

* "The Woman's Building at Montreat" (1917) * "Summer Conferences for Colored Women" (1922) * "A Visit to Carlotta Kemper Seminary" (1925) * ''The Woman's Auxiliary, Presbyterian Church U.S.'' (1927) * ''Yesteryears'' (1937) * ''Glorious Living'' (1937)


Personal life and legacy

Hallie Paxson married lawyer William Calvert Winsborough in 1888. They had six children together. Her daughter Zue died in childhood in 1895; her youngest child, Hal, died in 1938. She died in 1940, at the age of 75, in
Davenport, Iowa Davenport is a city in and the county seat of Scott County, Iowa, United States. Located along the Mississippi River on the eastern border of the state, it is the largest of the Quad Cities, a metropolitan area with a population of 384,324 and a ...
. Winsborough Hall, the first women's dormitory at Stillman College, was named in her memory, as was a building at Montreat Conference Center in North Carolina. Her grandson was a professor at the
University of Wisconsin A university () is an institution of higher (or tertiary) education and research which awards academic degrees in several academic disciplines. Universities typically offer both undergraduate and postgraduate programs. In the United States, t ...
. Her granddaughter and namesake,
Hallie Paxson Davis Christian Hallie may refer to: Places *Hallie, Wisconsin, a town in the United States **Lake Hallie, Wisconsin, a village incorporated into the above town *Hallie, Kentucky, an unincorporated community in the United States People Given name *Hallie (given ...
, was an engineer, and an ordained Methodist minister.


References


External links


"Mrs. Hallie Paxson Winsborough and Miss Carrie See Campbell"
(undated photograph), Pearl Digital Collections, Presbyterian Historical Society
"Meeting of Women in the Presbyterian Church, 1912"
(photograph includes Winsborough), Pearl Digital Collections, Presbyterian Historical Society {{DEFAULTSORT:Winsborough, Hallie Paxson 1865 births 1940 deaths American Presbyterians People from Mason City, Illinois American anti-lynching activists