|
The 1951 Grand Aerie Convention was a watershed event in the
history of the Fraternal Order of Eagles. At that international convention, held
August 8-12 in Rochester, New York, an amendment to the Grand Aerie Laws was
unanimously passed establishing a Grand Auxiliary.
It was what Past Grand
Worthy President Lester Loble, who was instrumental in the institution of the
Grand Auxiliary, called �a great moment in the history of the Ladies� Auxiliary
of the Fraternal Order of Eagles.�
To be sure, Eagles Auxiliaries existed
long before there was a Grand Auxiliary. The first one, at Pittsburgh, Kansas,
came into being on March 24, 1927, and just three days later the second
Auxiliary was instituted at Frontenac, Kansas.
By March, 1951, there were
965 local Auxiliaries boasting a combined total of approximately 130,000
members.
�The progress made in the last 24 years,� said Mrs. Eagle
magazine, which had been launched in 1948, �is a solid foundation on which Eagle
Auxiliaries must continue to build.�
The building was done quickly and
solidly. By late �51, there were 22 state and provincial Auxiliaries in
operation, and the time was ripe for an international governing body for the
distaff side of Eagledom.
At the 53rd Grand Aerie Convention in
Rochester, matters got underway at a Regional Membership Department Banquet at
the Seneca Hotel. In his greetings, printed in the banquet program, Grand Aerie
Director M.L. Brown set the stage for the historic occasion with these
words:
�It is especially fitting that the F.O.E. Encourage the upbuilding
of the Ladies� Auxiliaries of our Order. The growth of the Ladies� Auxiliaries
is the astonishment of the fraternal world. We welcome the ladies and
congratulate you on your outstanding success and predict great things for your
future.�
At that convention, state and provincial madam presidents
attended an all-day forum. Included were Kay Guy of Pennsylvania, Alta Browning
of Ohio, Carol Bennett of California, Mary Dunn of Toronto, Ontario; Phyllis
Wright of Washington, and Mrs. Eagle magazine editor Georgia
Walker.
Following the forum, the abovenamed Sisters were escorted into
the Grand Aerie session and presented to the assembly. Lester Loble, who
spearheaded the drafting of the legislation establishing the Grand Auxiliary,
introduced Alta Browning. According to the lead story int he October, 1951 issue
of Mrs. Eagle, �...Pride shone on every woman�s face as she said, in part: �The
Ladies� Auxiliaries of this Fraternity thank you, our Brothers, for everything
that you have done for us through the years. We thank you, who are the
representatives of the Grand Aerie, for making it possible for us to realize, in
the near future, one of our fondest dreams. We thank those delegates way back in
1926 for recognizing our Ladies� Auxiliaries. And then we thank the delegates
again a few years ago who made our State Auxiliaries possible.
�We are
very proud of the part that we have been able to play in this Fraternity, and I
am happy to pledge for our Ladies� Auxiliaries our support in all the programs
of the future that you may care to advance.�
It was, wrote Auxiliarian
Gertrude M. Puelicher, �truly a New Era for the women of Eagledom.�
At
the 1952 Grand Aerie Convention in Philadelphia, 1,100 Eagle Sisters from
virtually every American state and Canadian province watched with tremendous awe
and pride as Lester Loble was escorted to the platform in the Crystal Ballroom
of the Benjamin Franklin Hotel to officially institute the Grand Auxiliary whose
roots had been set down the year before.
�My friends,� said Loble, �here
in the City of Brotherly Love, in the year 1952, you women of Eagledom are
gathered upon an extraordinary occasion. Today is as historic as February 6,
1898, when the Fraternal Order of Eagles came into being. From that humble
beginning, in a little more than half a century, that meeting of six men in the
Moran shipyards has become the fastest-growing fraternal order in the world, a
humanitarian and patriotic organization that has no equal.
�Today, the
counterpart of that organization is born: the Ladies� Grand Auxiliary of the
F.O.E. May its future be as illustrious as the parent organization from which it
derives its being.�
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS IN AUXILIARY HISTORY
1926:
Grand Worthy President Charles C. Guenther issues Official Circular seeking
action in regard to the organization of Ladies Auxiliaries in the
F.O.E.
March 24, 1927: Pittsburgh, Kansas, is the site of the first
Ladies Auxiliary institution. Frontenac, Kansas, follows three days
later.
March 29, 1927: Davenport, Iowa Auxiliary 235 is instituted. Still
going strong, Davenport is the longest-surviving Auxiliary.
April 25,
1948: The first State/Provincial Auxiliaries in Montana and Ohio are instituted
on the same day.
August 8-12: Delegates to the 53rd Grand Aerie
Convention in Rochester, New York, approve establishment of the Grand
Auxiliary.
August 19, 1951: Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt becomes the first
woman to receive a life membership in the Ladies� Auxiliary in a special
presentation at Hyde Park, New York.
August, 1952: The Grand Auxiliary is
officially instituted in Philadelphia. Kay Guy of Irwin, Pennsylvania, is
charter Grand Madam President.
|