Flora
Flint, b. 1916
Flora Flint started out,
like many Akron women, as a secretary at one of the city's rubber companies. She
started at B.F. Goodrich (BFG) but Flint had tremendous organizational skill and
drive. She soon became executive secretary to the general superintendent of the
Tire Division of General Tire. Outside of work, she set up a student counseling
service for Akron girls and led the city's chapter of the American Association
of University Women (AAUW).
Flora Flint was born in
Webster, N.Y., in 1916. She was the third of six daughters of farmer Clarence
Flint. Her father died when she was still a child. In 1933 - in the depth of the
Great Depression - one of Flint's older sisters found a job in Akron and the entire
Flint family moved to the city. Flora finished her education at North High School
in 1934.
Flint always wanted to teach
mathematics but, during the Depression, the family needed the paycheck so she
went to work as a bookkeeper at the old Yeagar's Department Store. She did, however,
enroll at night school at The University of Akron, majoring in secretarial science.
It took seven years but Flint did get her degree, a B.S. in secretarial science,
joining Theta Upsilon, the secretarial honorary along the way.
In 1941, she joined BFG;
in 1946, she went over to General Tire.
After the war, Flint helped
set up a student counseling service in the city's schools which allowed high school
girls get on-the-job experience in business and industry. She also was active
in the AAUW, serving as president, vice president and secretary locally and secretary
and president of the state organization and chair of national AAUW building fund.
The local AAUW named one its scholarships after Flint.
Flint won many work-related
victories as well. In 1953, she earned the Certified Professional Secretary award
by passing exams in law, accounting, economics, secretarial skills and human relations.
She was promoted to vice president of the General Investment Real Estate Holding
Company - and was the first woman to earn the right to eat in the executive dining
room.
Flint is now retired from
General Tire and lives at the Rockynol Senior Citizens Home in Akron with several
of her sisters. Those sisters call her the "smart one who always tried to
do better than the rest of us."
Photo Courtesy of the Beacon
Journal.
