Anna
Frederica Heise O'Neil,
1887 - 1970
Anna Frederica Heise
O'Neil, champion of women's issues in the workplace and for the poor,
left a political legacy for Ohio women that few have matched.
Born in Cumberland,
Md., O'Neil moved to Summit County, Ohio, in 1915. O'Neil received her
public education at Coolville, Ohio. She attended the Cincinnati Conservatory
of Music briefly.
O'Neil met and married
her husband, Dennis (Mike), and pursued the work of a milliner in Akron
for a number of years. Her husband worked for Ohio Edison for 43 years
and Mrs. O'Neil become interested in politics when her husband served
on the City Council for Kenmore and then ran for mayor of that community.
O'Neil began her
career in politics in 1932, when she was selected to run for the Ohio
House of Representatives by the Women's Democratic Club of Summit County.
Initially refusing to run, she reconsidered but did not tell her husband.
When he read about it in the local newspaper the next morning, his only
comment was that she would never be elected. Elected the following year,
she was the only woman to serve 10 terms as a state legislator.
While in the state
legislature, O'Neil was the first woman to serve as chairman of the
House Finance Committee, a position she held for 12 years. She co-authored
a bill to match state funds for the needy during the Depression. Under
her direction, the first minimum wage bill was introduced for women
in industry.
O'Neil was appointed
by the governor to the Ohio Children and Youth Commission in 1949, and
represented the state at a national youth conference in 1950. She was
the chair of the Rehabilitation Committee of the Ohio Postwar Program
Commission that same year. The RCOPPC was an organization that dealt
with housing and urban development.
A natural leader,
O'Neil was elected state president of the National Order of Women Legislators
in 1953. The following year O'Neil retired from the General Assembly
because of health problems resulting from a car accident.
Over the years,
O'Neil served as president of many organizations. These include the
Women's Democratic Club of Akron, Kenmore Senior Citizens and the Krumroy
Senior Citizens.
Using her knowledge
of the political process, O'Neil also played an integral part in the
Akron and Summit County Federation of Women's Club, the Board of Legislators
of Akron and Summit County, the Akron Area Citizen's Committee on Aging,
the G.A.R., and the Buckley Post of the Women's Relief Corps.
An avid gardener,
O'Neil enjoyed being an active member of the Town and Country Garden
Club and the Garden Forum of Greater Akron. She also attended Immaculate
Conception Catholic Church in Akron and was a member of the Altar and
Rosary Society.
O'Neil was well
respected by everyone who knew her. In an article dated March 1, 1954,
the Beacon Journal says, "while [we] have not always agreed with
Mrs. O'Neil on specific issues, we have respected her conscientious
devotion to her duties. She has set a splendid example as a public servant
which we hope will be followed by other citizens, both women and men."
Photo courtesy of
the Beacon Journal.
--Penny
Fox
