Laura Horn
McClure, 1910-1995
Laura Horn McClure
never forgot the hard times of her youth. So when a nurse asked her
to donate some of her daughter’s clothes, she was happy to oblige.
That simple act of charity led to one of Akron’s most extraordinary
volunteer agencies, Good Neighbors.
The call came in
1957. McClure said the nurse had a family so poor that the girls couldn’t
attend school because they didn’t have anything to wear. “So
I gathered up what I could and took the stuff to them,” she told
the Beacon Journal.
That act of kindness
started a chain reaction. Soon McClure had more requests than she could
handle so she turned to her church, North Hill Methodist, and its Women’s
Circle for help. The church donated a room to sort and store clothing
and the women got busy. A new organization had been formed, Good Neighbors.
But there was so much need in Akron that a single church and a single
Women’s Circle couldn’t do it all. Soon other churches were
involved.
The Good Neighbors
organization provides food, clothing, and aid to Akron area residents
that need a hand. The Good Neighbors does it without any bureaucracy
or red tape. It was many volunteers, working through the churches and
civic organizations in the area, to help residents in need.
By 1967, Good Neighbors
had spread to 44 churches and helped almost 12,000. By 1969, about 60
churches were involved. In 1971, 100 churches and civic organizations
were part of the Good Neighbors network and thousands of needy Akron
families were getting food, clothing or other aid when they needed it.
McClure headed the
group for its first 25 years but she did more than just administer the
organization. She delivered baskets and processed requests. In fact,
she’d answer the phone calls that started around 8 a.m. and lasted
until late at night. When the group didn’t have enough money to
pay the rent for the office, McClure recruited teenagers to help her
pick enough strawberries to pay the bill. When the group fell short
of the money needed to fill Christmas baskets, she went into debt to
buy the ham and potatoes and fruit needed. She was also the main fundraiser,
going out to churches and civic organizations and urging listeners to
donate.
All this seemed
so far removed from the painfully shy little girl from Gambier, Ohio.
Born in Butler, near Mt. Vernon, Ohio, in 1910, McClure was the daughter
of Charlie Horn, a schoolteacher who earned $100 a month teaching in
Gambier. The family didn’t have much in the way of material goods
and the other children often made fun of the poorly dressed little girl.
As a result, she became very shy.
During the Depression
she married Harold McClure. He worked for the Works Progress Administration.
Things improved once they moved to Akron in 1944. He found a job at
Goodrich and she for a time worked as a waitress at the old Akron Hotel.
When her two daughters
were young, she was active in the PTA and played the piano for Bettes
School events and the North Hill Methodist Church. Once she got the
Good Neighbors program started, she didn’t have much time for
any other activities.
The whole McClure
family was involved in the organization. Her husband and daughters all
helped out. By the 1980s, however, the Good Neighbors had grown beyond
the McClures. While she remained active in the group, the day-to-day
administration was turned over to others.
Today, Good Neighbors
still helps thousands of those in need in the Akron area. The basic
concept is the same. This is a group without any bureaucracy or red
tape that just helps people in need.
During her life,
McClure received many awards for her work. In 1967 Lane Bryant named
her one of nine outstanding volunteers; in 1968, the Beacon Journal
selected her as a Woman of Achievement; in 1974 the National Association
of Social Workers honored her.
When McClure died
on May 7, 1995, her family asked that no flowers be sent and donations
be made to Good Neighbors. McClure would have approved.
--Kathleen
Endres
