Английская Википедия:Genevieve Earle

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Genevieve Beavers Earle (1885 - March 7, 1956)[1] was a New York City politician. She was the first woman elected to the city council of New York City and the first woman to be involved in a New York City Charter Revision Commission. She was also a feminist.[2]

Biography

Earle was born in Blythebourne in 1885 and attended Erasmus Hall High School.[3] Earle graduated from Adelphi University in 1907.[4] She had worked in the field of sociology while in school and showed interest in becoming involved in New York politics immediately after graduation.[3] She married William P. Earle, Jr. on October 22, 1913.[5] They had two children, Mary and William, Jr.[6] Earle's husband died in 1940 of an "abdominal ailment."[5] In 1948, she spent four months in the hospital when she broke her hip by slipping on the ice, and this may have influenced her decision to retire from council later.[2] In 1949, she retired from New York City politics and moved to Bell House in Bellport.[7]

She died in her home in a fire that may have been "caused by a dropped cigarette in her bedroom."[8]

Career

Earle began working in politics in 1907.[3] She started doing municipal research in 1908 and was one of the first women in this field.[7] As a direct result of her early studies, salaries for police patrolmen were increased in New York.[7] She chaired a woman's committee for the election of John Purroy Mitchel in 1917.[3] Also in 1917, she was appointed to the board of Child Welfare.[3] Earle was president of the Brooklyn chapter of the League of Women Voters.[9]

Earle served as the first woman on a New York City Charter Revision Commission during 1935 to 1936.[10][11] The charter created by the commission was adopted in 1936 and initiated the use of proportional representation in the city’s elections.Шаблон:Sfn She was awarded a gold medal of service to Brooklyn, partly because of her work on the commission, which was presented by Mayor La Guardia in 1936.[12]

Earle was the first woman elected to the New York City Council in 1937,[13] and she was the only woman to serve as a council member in the city for some time.[14] She was one of a pool of 99 candidates for council, out of which 9 were voted in.[15] Earle ran as a member of the City Fusion Party,[16] and also had the support of many African American voters in Brooklyn.[17] Earle also appointed a black woman, Emily V. Gibbes, to a job in the city as a secretary.[17] She served in council from 1938 to 1949.[10] Between 1940 and 1949, she was the council's Republican Minority Leader.[4] While on the council, she promoted the creation of recreational centers and playgrounds in the city.[18] In 1953, she was appointed to a five-year term on Suffolk County's Planning Board.[2]

Earle was also involved with libraries. In 1934, Mayor La Guardia appointed her to the board of trustees for the Brooklyn Public Library.[3] Earle worked closely with Municipal Reference Librarian Rebecca B. Rankin, who helped her with research related to council work.[19] Earle was a vice president of the board of the Bellport Memorial Library.[7] She started an archives collection at Bellport Memorial Library.[20]

Adelphi University honored Earle with an Honorary Doctorate of Laws in 1942.[4] In 1962, Adelphi named a girls' dormitory "Earle Hall," in her honor.[7] Another honor was her election as an "honorary life member" of the Women's City Club of New York in 1951.[7]

References

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External links

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