Chalista
Willard Wheeler
Chalista Willard
Wheeler only lived in Akron, Ohio, for 16 years; but that was long enough
for her to establish the city's Young Women's Christian Association
(YWCA) and First Disciple Church's Young Women's Missionary Association.
Little is known
about Wheeler's activities before she came to Akron. She was born Chalista
Willard and she married young banker David P. Wheeler in Cleveland in
1873. In 1893, the Wheeler family - David, Chalista, daughters Ruth
and Jane, and son Willard - moved to Akron where David took over the
management of Citizens' Savings Loan Association. That financial institution
was still reeling from the Panic of 1892. He put that institution's
financial matters in order and soon started a new bank - Citizens' National
Bank.
In the 1890s both
Wheeler daughters were away at school, Hiram College, a small liberal
arts institution in Northeastern Ohio. Both had affiliated with the
YWCA there and they told their mother about the benefits of the organization
personally and to employed women in general. The idea of starting a
YWCA in Akron wasn't new. For several years, Akron's Council of Women
had talked about the need for one, especially since more and more young
women in the city were working outside the home. But nothing happened
until November 1900 when Chalista Wheeler invited a small group of friends
to her Fir Hill home to look into the prospect of starting a YWCA in
Akron. Two strangers were at that meeting - Helen Barnes, national secretary
of the YWCA, and Nellie Adams Lowry, the group's state secretary. Under
the tutelage and advice of these professional organizers, the Akron
women quietly did research on the number of women employed in the city
and canvassed for potential members.
By March 1901 they
had their answers. Akron did indeed have a large pool of women working
outside the home; and a large number of women -181 returned pledge cards
- were interested in joining the YWCA. The charter membership read like
a Who's Who of Akron. It included wives and daughters of industrialists
Seiberling, Manton, Schumacher, Andrews, Robinson and others. Wives
and daughters of executives, bankers, attorneys, city officials and
college professors signed on. No one Protestant denomination predominated
but one socio-economic class did. Wheeler had enlisted the wealthiest,
most widely respected women in the city to support the YWCA. On March
25, 1901, the Akron YWCA held its first meeting at the First Congregational
Church and Wheeler was elected president. Wheeler provided the leadership
during those first years. According to a memorial issued at the time
of her retirement from the YWCA, Wheeler was the key to the organization's
success. "The work succeeded from the first for Mrs. Wheeler was
wise in seeing that such an organization would supply a long felt want
and because at its head was placed a woman in whom the public had implicit
confidence not only as to business ability, but also as to her judgment
as to the influences that go to strengthen womanhood."
Between 1901 to
1909, Wheeler served as president, setting up the association's first
"rooms," hiring the first general secretaries (for a time
daughter Ruth Wheeler served in that capacity), and supervising the
growing number of programs being offered the women in the city. She
did this even as she faced personal tragedies. Her husband was electrocuted
in his bank on Christmas Day. She did this even as she faced her responsibilities
at the First Disciple Church (now High Street Church of Christ). Wheeler
had started and served as president of the Young Women's Missionary
Society (which became the Ella Thompson
Missionary Society).
In 1909, she resigned
from the YWCA and moved away to care for her mother, who was ill.
Photo courtesy of
the YWCA of Summit County.
--Kathleen
L. Endres
