Elizabeth
Undine Slade Voris,
1855-1930
Elizabeth ("Lizzie") Undine Slade Voris helped organize many
of Akron's institutions and women's organizations.
Elizabeth Undine
Slade was born in Columbus, Ohio, the daughter of William Hooker Slade
and his wife, Marion Elizabeth Bell. She was the great-granddaughter
of William Slade and John Alvord, two influential corporals in the Revolutionary
War.
Slade received her
bachelor's degree from Buchtel College (now The University of Akron)
in 1877 and her master's degree from the same institution in 1880. During
this time, she was a math tutor in the Preparatory Department of Buchtel
College.
During her college
years, Slade was a charter member of the Akron chapter of Kappa Kappa
Gamma women's fraternity. She represented them in the Akron Pan-Hellenic
Association.
Slade married Edwin
Voris, an attorney with Voris, Vaughn, and Vaughn, in 1879. He was the
son of local Akron hero, Maj. Gen. Alvin Coe Voris, and Lydia Allyn.
They had four children, Lydia (Voris) Kolbe, Elizabeth (Voris) Lawry,
Marion Voris and William. William's wife,
Louise Voris, was also active in Akron community
work.
Elizabeth Voris
helped organize two important women's organizations in the city. She
was a charter member of the College Club of Akron, an organization committed
to the intellectual improvement of college-educated women, and the Women's
Benevolent Association, one of the pioneering welfare groups of the
city. As a member of the College Club, she took part in the Division
of Literary Extension in the Applied Education Department.
Voris was also a
member of the Women's Universalist Missionary Association, the Fifty
Year Club of Akron, the Daughters of the American Revolution and the
Dames of the Loyal Legion. From 1919-1920, she was the treasurer of
the Katherine Claypole Student Loan Fund,
an organization to provide worthy college students with enough money
to continue their education. Voris was on the first committee of this
organization, representing the Daughters of the American Revolution.
She died in September
of 1930.
Photo courtesy of
The University of Akron Archives.
--Stephanie
Devers
